Description

Book Synopsis
A lively, interdisciplinary history of why the banana became America's most popular fresh fruit and how its popularity has affected the banana republics of Central America.

Trade Review
An historian by profession, John Soluri has written a book that defies disciplinary pigeonholing. This ambitious treatise on ‘banana cultures' links Honduran production with North American consumption, ecumenically drawing on archival records and oral histories as well as the burgeoning field of agroecology and the interpretive methodologies of cultural studies. . . . Soluri has accomplished what I thought impossible: writing a new and innovative book on one of the most-mined topics in Central American history. This book makes an important contribution to the field by connecting banana production and consumption, and its accessible style makes it well suited for classroom use. -- Edward F. Fischer * Journal of Latin American Studies *
[Soluri] provides a well-written, balanced, and multifaceted perspective on the banana. . . . Banana Cultures leaves the reader with an understanding of the banana export trade that combines history and the botany and agriculture of the banana with a discussion of production, economics, and the changing culture of consumption in the United States. The reader will never take a banana for granted again. -- Marcus B. Griffin * Gastronomica *
Emphasizing a dimension of banana production mentioned in passing by others—the ecological challenges posed by monoculture farming—Soluri offers a major rewriting of the industry's history. His eminently readable account starts on the north coast of Honduras, one of the first regions incorporated into the banana trade. . . . [Soluri's account] is significant both for its rethinking of industry history and its skillful integration of the material, ecological, and symbolic aspects of banana production and consumption. In sum, the book is essential reading for anyone interested in the production and social life of everyday commodities. -- Mark Moberg * American Historical Review *
[A] splendid transnational history…this is a path-breaking study that makes a major contribution to agroecology and to the history of business strategies, agricultural science and technology, work processes, and the marketing and consumption of tropical commodities in North America. * The Americas *
"[Banana Cultures] will be a standard-bearer in banana plantation history for years to come." * Environmental History *
Soluri’s narrative, well written and informed by popular culture and oral histories, is also very engaging for readers of any background. By providing a comparative perspective in his last chapter, he also highlights the implications of his approach and points to some other commodities, such as coffee and sugar, that could benefit from his approach. -- Felipe Cruz * Not Even Past *
Soluri’s volume remains distinctive for its sweeping consideration of the social, ecological and symbolic contexts of banana production and consumption...Banana Cultures remains essential reading on the social, cultural and ecological dimensions of the fruit and firms that transformed much of Central America. * Journal of Latin American Studies *
Soluri has taken an already classic and wonderfully accessible work and further enhanced it by bookending it with these two new thought-provoking and insightful essays. In doing so, he has only strengthened an already pioneering work. * The Americas *

Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition: Bananas, Seriously
Preface to the First Edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Linking Places of Production and Consumption
Chapter 1. Going Bananas
Chapter 2. Space Invaders
Chapter 3. Altered Landscapes and Transformed Livelihoods
Chapter 4. Sigatoka, Science, and Control
Chapter 5. Revisiting the Green Prison
Chapter 6. The Lives and Time of Miss Chiquita
Chapter 7. La Química
Chapter 8. Bananas Cultures in Comparative Perspective
Postscript to the Second Edition: Beyond Banana Cultures
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Banana Cultures

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    A Paperback / softback by John Soluri

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      View other formats and editions of Banana Cultures by John Soluri

      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 30/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9781477322802, 978-1477322802
      ISBN10: 1477322809

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A lively, interdisciplinary history of why the banana became America's most popular fresh fruit and how its popularity has affected the banana republics of Central America.

      Trade Review
      An historian by profession, John Soluri has written a book that defies disciplinary pigeonholing. This ambitious treatise on ‘banana cultures' links Honduran production with North American consumption, ecumenically drawing on archival records and oral histories as well as the burgeoning field of agroecology and the interpretive methodologies of cultural studies. . . . Soluri has accomplished what I thought impossible: writing a new and innovative book on one of the most-mined topics in Central American history. This book makes an important contribution to the field by connecting banana production and consumption, and its accessible style makes it well suited for classroom use. -- Edward F. Fischer * Journal of Latin American Studies *
      [Soluri] provides a well-written, balanced, and multifaceted perspective on the banana. . . . Banana Cultures leaves the reader with an understanding of the banana export trade that combines history and the botany and agriculture of the banana with a discussion of production, economics, and the changing culture of consumption in the United States. The reader will never take a banana for granted again. -- Marcus B. Griffin * Gastronomica *
      Emphasizing a dimension of banana production mentioned in passing by others—the ecological challenges posed by monoculture farming—Soluri offers a major rewriting of the industry's history. His eminently readable account starts on the north coast of Honduras, one of the first regions incorporated into the banana trade. . . . [Soluri's account] is significant both for its rethinking of industry history and its skillful integration of the material, ecological, and symbolic aspects of banana production and consumption. In sum, the book is essential reading for anyone interested in the production and social life of everyday commodities. -- Mark Moberg * American Historical Review *
      [A] splendid transnational history…this is a path-breaking study that makes a major contribution to agroecology and to the history of business strategies, agricultural science and technology, work processes, and the marketing and consumption of tropical commodities in North America. * The Americas *
      "[Banana Cultures] will be a standard-bearer in banana plantation history for years to come." * Environmental History *
      Soluri’s narrative, well written and informed by popular culture and oral histories, is also very engaging for readers of any background. By providing a comparative perspective in his last chapter, he also highlights the implications of his approach and points to some other commodities, such as coffee and sugar, that could benefit from his approach. -- Felipe Cruz * Not Even Past *
      Soluri’s volume remains distinctive for its sweeping consideration of the social, ecological and symbolic contexts of banana production and consumption...Banana Cultures remains essential reading on the social, cultural and ecological dimensions of the fruit and firms that transformed much of Central America. * Journal of Latin American Studies *
      Soluri has taken an already classic and wonderfully accessible work and further enhanced it by bookending it with these two new thought-provoking and insightful essays. In doing so, he has only strengthened an already pioneering work. * The Americas *

      Table of Contents
      Preface to the Second Edition: Bananas, Seriously
      Preface to the First Edition
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction. Linking Places of Production and Consumption
      Chapter 1. Going Bananas
      Chapter 2. Space Invaders
      Chapter 3. Altered Landscapes and Transformed Livelihoods
      Chapter 4. Sigatoka, Science, and Control
      Chapter 5. Revisiting the Green Prison
      Chapter 6. The Lives and Time of Miss Chiquita
      Chapter 7. La Química
      Chapter 8. Bananas Cultures in Comparative Perspective
      Postscript to the Second Edition: Beyond Banana Cultures
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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