{"title":"在种植园新世造土","authors":"Andrew Ofstehage","doi":"10.1080/03066150.2023.2266705","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTBased on 14 months of ethnographic research, this paper analyzes soil management within the plantation model of farmingin order to understand the extent to which life on large-scale monocultural farms can be controlled and directed toward extractiveproduction. Transnational soy farmers in Western Bahia Brazil ‘correct’ soils in the region to make them productive and marshal thisagronomic work to claim that they have added value to the land by ‘building it up’. Still, the permeability of the plantation keepstransnational farmers from achieving their dreams of control.KEYWORDS: plantationsoilPlantationocenelandBrazilUnited StatesCerrado AcknowledgementsThe author thanks Wendy Wolford for her continued efforts to bring forth ‘A Conversation on the Plantationocene’ and later to lead the Journal of Peasant Studies forum on the Plantationocene. This paper received generous critical feedback from the Wolford Writing Lab as well as two highly thoughtful and engaged reviewers. All shortcomings are the author’s. This work would not have been possible without the participation of research participants and funding from the UNC-CH Graduate School, Wenner-Gren, and IIE-Fulbright.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 A moniker for the Brazilian states of Maranhão, Tocantins, Piauí, and Bahia. These states are at the center of soybean commodity frontier expansion in Brazil, thanks in good measure to government support (consisting primarily of agricultural credit and agricultural research).2 This is not the first time whitefly have threatened the Brazilian soy crop. A 1973 report warned of large populations of whitefly in soy fields of Parana and Sao Paulo as well as an increased incidence of related viruses; 100% of the soy crop was affected and whitefly numbers were blamed on the great extension of the cultivation of soy beans, long planting seasons, and a long, hot summer. They recommended restricting the cropping season, working to identify whitefly control strategies, and instituting breeding programs to develop virus-resistant plants (Costa, Costa, and Sauer Citation1973).3 Once-prominent hypotheses that land ‘exhaustion’ or degradation in the US South deepened Southern plantations’ dependence on slaves have been largely disproven (Zirkle Citation1943), but legacies of land degradation on plantations live on in soil memories (Martens and Robertson 2019).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Fulbright Association; the Graduate School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and the Wenner-Gren Foundation: [Grant Number 8906].Notes on contributorsAndrew OfstehageAndrew Ofstehage is currently a program coordinator at North Carolina State University; previously he was a postdoctoral associate at Cornell University. He completed his PhD in anthropology in 2018 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he defended his dissertation, ‘“When We Came There Was Nothing”: Land, Work, and Value among Transnational Soybean Farmers in the Brazilian Cerrado’. His research among transnational soybean farmers in Brazil incorporates training in agronomy and anthropology and asks how transnational farmers engage with soils and landscapes in Brazil; become managers of workers and investors; and create and re-create agrarian communities out of place. He is now conducting new research on the bio-cultural life of soy consumption in the United States, planning new work on the socio-material life of soil, and continuing ethnographic research with transnational soy farmers in Brazil.","PeriodicalId":48271,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Peasant Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":4.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making soil in the Plantationocene\",\"authors\":\"Andrew Ofstehage\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/03066150.2023.2266705\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTBased on 14 months of ethnographic research, this paper analyzes soil management within the plantation model of farmingin order to understand the extent to which life on large-scale monocultural farms can be controlled and directed toward extractiveproduction. Transnational soy farmers in Western Bahia Brazil ‘correct’ soils in the region to make them productive and marshal thisagronomic work to claim that they have added value to the land by ‘building it up’. Still, the permeability of the plantation keepstransnational farmers from achieving their dreams of control.KEYWORDS: plantationsoilPlantationocenelandBrazilUnited StatesCerrado AcknowledgementsThe author thanks Wendy Wolford for her continued efforts to bring forth ‘A Conversation on the Plantationocene’ and later to lead the Journal of Peasant Studies forum on the Plantationocene. This paper received generous critical feedback from the Wolford Writing Lab as well as two highly thoughtful and engaged reviewers. All shortcomings are the author’s. 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They recommended restricting the cropping season, working to identify whitefly control strategies, and instituting breeding programs to develop virus-resistant plants (Costa, Costa, and Sauer Citation1973).3 Once-prominent hypotheses that land ‘exhaustion’ or degradation in the US South deepened Southern plantations’ dependence on slaves have been largely disproven (Zirkle Citation1943), but legacies of land degradation on plantations live on in soil memories (Martens and Robertson 2019).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Fulbright Association; the Graduate School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and the Wenner-Gren Foundation: [Grant Number 8906].Notes on contributorsAndrew OfstehageAndrew Ofstehage is currently a program coordinator at North Carolina State University; previously he was a postdoctoral associate at Cornell University. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要基于14个月的民族志研究,本文分析了种植模式下的土壤管理,以了解大规模单一种植农场的生活控制和导向采掘性生产的程度。巴西西巴伊亚州的跨国大豆种植者“纠正”了该地区的土壤,使其具有生产力,并组织了这项农艺工作,声称他们通过“建造”土地增加了价值。然而,种植园的渗透性使跨国农民无法实现他们的控制梦想。作者感谢Wendy Wolford为提出“planationocene对话”所做的不懈努力,以及她后来领导的《农民研究杂志》planationocene论坛。这篇论文得到了来自Wolford写作实验室以及两位高度周到和敬业的审稿人的慷慨批评反馈。所有的缺点都是作者的。如果没有研究参与者的参与和UNC-CH研究生院、Wenner-Gren和ie - fulbright的资助,这项工作是不可能完成的。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1巴西马拉州、托坎廷斯州、Piauí和巴伊亚州的别名。由于政府的大力支持(主要包括农业信贷和农业研究),这些州处于巴西大豆商品前沿扩张的中心这并不是粉虱第一次威胁巴西大豆作物。1973年的一份报告警告说,在巴拉那和圣保罗的大豆田里有大量白蝇,相关病毒的发病率也在增加;100%的大豆作物都受到了影响,白蝇的数量被归咎于大豆种植的大规模扩展、漫长的种植季节和漫长而炎热的夏天。他们建议限制种植季节,努力确定白蝇控制策略,并制定育种计划以开发抗病毒植物(Costa, Costa, and Sauer Citation1973)曾经突出的假设是,美国南方的土地“枯竭”或退化加深了南方种植园对奴隶的依赖,但这一假设在很大程度上已被证明是错误的(Zirkle citation, 1943),但种植园土地退化的遗留问题仍存在于土壤记忆中(马丁斯和罗伯逊,2019)。这项工作得到了富布赖特协会的支持;北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校研究生院;温纳-格伦基金会:[批准号8906]。贡献者说明andrew Ofstehage andrew Ofstehage目前是北卡罗来纳州立大学的项目协调员;此前,他是康奈尔大学的博士后。他于2018年在北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校完成了人类学博士学位,在那里他为自己的论文辩护,“当我们来的时候什么都没有”:巴西塞拉多跨国大豆种植者的土地、工作和价值。他对巴西跨国大豆种植者的研究包括农学和人类学培训,并询问跨国农民如何参与巴西的土壤和景观;成为工人和投资者的管理者;在不合适的地方创造并重新创造农业社区。目前,他正在对美国大豆消费的生物文化生活进行新的研究,计划对土壤的社会物质生活进行新的研究,并继续与巴西的跨国大豆种植者进行民族志研究。
ABSTRACTBased on 14 months of ethnographic research, this paper analyzes soil management within the plantation model of farmingin order to understand the extent to which life on large-scale monocultural farms can be controlled and directed toward extractiveproduction. Transnational soy farmers in Western Bahia Brazil ‘correct’ soils in the region to make them productive and marshal thisagronomic work to claim that they have added value to the land by ‘building it up’. Still, the permeability of the plantation keepstransnational farmers from achieving their dreams of control.KEYWORDS: plantationsoilPlantationocenelandBrazilUnited StatesCerrado AcknowledgementsThe author thanks Wendy Wolford for her continued efforts to bring forth ‘A Conversation on the Plantationocene’ and later to lead the Journal of Peasant Studies forum on the Plantationocene. This paper received generous critical feedback from the Wolford Writing Lab as well as two highly thoughtful and engaged reviewers. All shortcomings are the author’s. This work would not have been possible without the participation of research participants and funding from the UNC-CH Graduate School, Wenner-Gren, and IIE-Fulbright.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 A moniker for the Brazilian states of Maranhão, Tocantins, Piauí, and Bahia. These states are at the center of soybean commodity frontier expansion in Brazil, thanks in good measure to government support (consisting primarily of agricultural credit and agricultural research).2 This is not the first time whitefly have threatened the Brazilian soy crop. A 1973 report warned of large populations of whitefly in soy fields of Parana and Sao Paulo as well as an increased incidence of related viruses; 100% of the soy crop was affected and whitefly numbers were blamed on the great extension of the cultivation of soy beans, long planting seasons, and a long, hot summer. They recommended restricting the cropping season, working to identify whitefly control strategies, and instituting breeding programs to develop virus-resistant plants (Costa, Costa, and Sauer Citation1973).3 Once-prominent hypotheses that land ‘exhaustion’ or degradation in the US South deepened Southern plantations’ dependence on slaves have been largely disproven (Zirkle Citation1943), but legacies of land degradation on plantations live on in soil memories (Martens and Robertson 2019).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Fulbright Association; the Graduate School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and the Wenner-Gren Foundation: [Grant Number 8906].Notes on contributorsAndrew OfstehageAndrew Ofstehage is currently a program coordinator at North Carolina State University; previously he was a postdoctoral associate at Cornell University. He completed his PhD in anthropology in 2018 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he defended his dissertation, ‘“When We Came There Was Nothing”: Land, Work, and Value among Transnational Soybean Farmers in the Brazilian Cerrado’. His research among transnational soybean farmers in Brazil incorporates training in agronomy and anthropology and asks how transnational farmers engage with soils and landscapes in Brazil; become managers of workers and investors; and create and re-create agrarian communities out of place. He is now conducting new research on the bio-cultural life of soy consumption in the United States, planning new work on the socio-material life of soil, and continuing ethnographic research with transnational soy farmers in Brazil.
期刊介绍:
A leading journal in the field of rural politics and development, The Journal of Peasant Studies (JPS) provokes and promotes critical thinking about social structures, institutions, actors and processes of change in and in relation to the rural world. It fosters inquiry into how agrarian power relations between classes and other social groups are created, understood, contested and transformed. JPS pays special attention to questions of ‘agency’ of marginalized groups in agrarian societies, particularly their autonomy and capacity to interpret – and change – their conditions.