Indigo Plantations and Science in Colonial India

£105.00

Indigo Plantations and Science in Colonial India

Asian history Industrialisation and industrial history Colonialism and imperialism Economics Economic history Agriculture, agribusiness and food production industries History of science

Author: Prakash Kumar

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 27th August 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9781139579582


Prakash Kumar and the History of Agricultural Indigo

Prakash Kumar documents the history of agricultural indigo, exploring the effects of nineteenth-century globalisation on this colonial industry. Charting the indigo culture from the early modern period to the twentieth century, Kumar discusses how knowledge of indigo culture thrived among peasant traditions on the Indian subcontinent in the early modern period and was then developed by Caribbean planters and French naturalists who codified this knowledge into widely disseminated texts.

European planters who settled in Bengal with the establishment of British rule in the late eighteenth century drew on this information. From the nineteenth century, indigo culture became more modern, science-based and expert driven, and with the advent of a cheaper, purer synthetic indigo in 1897, indigo science crossed paths with the colonial state’s effort to develop a science for agricultural development.

Only at the end of the First World War, when the industrial use of synthetic indigo for textile dyeing and printing became almost universal, did the indigo industry’s optimism fade away.

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