Seeds of Empire
The Environmental Transformation of New Zealand
Tom Brooking author Eric Pawson author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:30th Oct '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The traditional image of New Zealand is one of verdant landscapes with sheep grazing on lush green pastures. Yet this landscape is almost entirely an artificial creation. As Britain became increasingly reliant on its overseas territories for supplies of food and raw material, so all over the Empire indigenous plants were replaced with English grasses to provide the worked up products of pasture - meat, butter, cheese, wool, and hides. In New Zealand this process was carried to an extreme, with forest cleared and swamps drained. How, why and with what consequences did the transformation of New Zealand into these empires of grass occur? 'Seeds of Empire' provides both an exciting appraisal of New Zealand's environmental history and a long overdue exploration of the significance of grass in the processes of sowing empire.
'Starting with a seemingly simple question - How did New Zealand come to be covered in exotic grasses? - Seeds of Empire unfolds a fascinating history with a pertinence far beyond New Zealand. It is the story not just of a country transformed by a 'productivist paradigm' and a belief in a moral landscape that suppressed biodiversity: it also shows how such changes are inseparable from larger transformations in global power and exchange. This interdisciplinary volume, in tracing the movement of people, plants, ideas, technologies and the networks they created, make a convincing case that the British Empire was built on grasses and the sea.' - Professor Richard White, Stanford University
ISBN: 9781845117979
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 590g
296 pages