“Exhaustively researched and accessibly written, McCook offers a timely contribution with this forward-looking book, which asks us to consider what social and ecological resilience look like as we advance into an uncertain future. Though formally a work of agricultural history, it will be of use as a detailed reference for researchers outside the discipline, as well as to the particularly curious coffee afcionado.” - Sabine Parrish (Agriculture and Human Values) “McCook makes crucial contributions to a number of related fields that usually don’t intersect: history of science, global history, and commodity studies. His decision to focus on the science of plant disease and the politics and institutions related results in a welcome challenge to the anthropocentrism that too often dominates the study of history. With stunning breadth of research and inquiry, this is a rich and original work.” - Steven C. Topik, author (with Allen Wells) of Global Markets Transformed: 1870–1945 <i>“Coffee Is Not Forever</i> is top-notch scholarship that provides a rare pan-tropical analysis of the interactions of people, plants, and pathogens in the coffee regions of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. This book will be of immense value to readers interested not only in coffee, but also environmental and commodity histories more broadly. Like all great transnational histories, it is both connected and comparative. And for the latte generation, this book may forever change the way they think about robusta coffee.” - John Soluri, author of Banana Cultures: Agriculture, Consumption, and Environmental Change in Honduras and the United States “There is an urgent need for books like [this]. Even as people are more attuned than ever before to the grim realities of a pandemic amidst the constant, rapid ricochet of human bodies around the planet, many remain unaware of the epidemics that rage among our most essential companion species-that is, among domesticated crops and livestock. It is possible that zoonotic diseases will garner greater attention thanks to desperate curiosity about the origins of SARS-CoV-2. Meanwhile, plant diseases will go on multiplying, with their sustained discussion unlikely outside agroindustry and agronomy. McCook’s timely study makes clear the consequences of collective blindness to these ever-present epidemics in his globe-spanning, 150-year history of Hemileia vastatrix. That is the fungus responsible for coffee leaf rust, a disease for which there is no cure. The measures that have been, and still are being, taken to keep your morning coffee affordable and palatable in light of the rust might provide as much of a jolt as the java itself.” - Helen Anne Curry (Environmental History)
Contents
List of Illustrations ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Abbreviations and Acronyms xxi
Chapter 1 The Devourer of Dreams 1
Chapter 2 Coffee Rust Contained 17
Chapter 3 The Epicenter: Ceylon 36
Chapter 4 Arabica Graveyards: Asia and the Pacific 65
Chapter 5 Robusta to the Rescue 90
Chapter 6 The “Malaria of Coffee”: Africa 108
Chapter 7 Coffee, Cold War, and Colonial Modernization 125
Chapter 8 A Plague Foretold: Latin America 140
Chapter 9 The Big Rust 171
Chapter 10 Coffee Is Not (Necessarily) Forever 197
Notes 207
Bibliography 235
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Stuart McCook is professor of history at the University of Guelph. His research focuses on the environmental history of tropical crops and commodities. He is also the author of States of Nature: Science, Agriculture, and Environment in the Spanish Caribbean, 1760–1940.