Cultivating "Care": Colonial Botany and the Moral Lives of Oil Palm at the Twentieth Century’s Turn

Main author: Rudge, Alice
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-40356
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description This paper draws on archival research to trace the techniques used by scientists and government officials involved with palm oil at the turn of the twentieth century. For them, mundane practices of “carefulness” were paramount as they worked on collecting, identifying, marketing, and improving the oil palm. But they also applied this so-called care to people: care of the oil palm was thought to presuppose care of the “native,” providing a correction for what were seen as “careless” local manners of cultivation. Colonial techniques of care thus sought to encompass both plants and peoples within contemporary liberal rhetorics of efficiency and moral improvement. This embodies how scientific and political care can interlink through their undersides of control, exploitation, and domination, which remain obscured by narratives of care themselves. Examining these links between commodity histories and scientific techniques is therefore essential for understanding environmental and social concerns regarding oil palm plantations today. An awareness of the afterlives of colonial discourses might encourage a more critical “care” in response to these issues today, challenging taken-for-granted notions of the benefits of corporate care.
format Journal Article
author Rudge, Alice
author_facet Rudge, Alice
authorStr Rudge, Alice
author_letter Rudge, Alice
title Cultivating "Care": Colonial Botany and the Moral Lives of Oil Palm at the Twentieth Century’s Turn
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2022
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/40356/