Banana Cultures: Agriculture, Consumption, and Environmental Change in Honduras and the United States

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University of Texas Press, Mar 6, 2009 - History - 336 pages

Bananas, the most frequently consumed fresh fruit in the United States, have been linked to Miss Chiquita and Carmen Miranda, "banana republics," and Banana Republic clothing stores—everything from exotic kitsch, to Third World dictatorships, to middle-class fashion. But how did the rise in banana consumption in the United States affect the banana-growing regions of Central America? In this lively, interdisciplinary study, John Soluri integrates agroecology, anthropology, political economy, and history to trace the symbiotic growth of the export banana industry in Honduras and the consumer mass market in the United States.

Beginning in the 1870s when bananas first appeared in the U.S. marketplace, Soluri examines the tensions between the small-scale growers, who dominated the trade in the early years, and the shippers. He then shows how rising demand led to changes in production that resulted in the formation of major agribusinesses, spawned international migrations, and transformed great swaths of the Honduran environment into monocultures susceptible to plant disease epidemics that in turn changed Central American livelihoods. Soluri also looks at labor practices and workers' lives, changing gender roles on the banana plantations, the effects of pesticides on the Honduran environment and people, and the mass marketing of bananas to consumers in the United States. His multifaceted account of a century of banana production and consumption adds an important chapter to the history of Honduras, as well as to the larger history of globalization and its effects on rural peoples, local economies, and biodiversity.

 

Contents

Linking Places of Production and Consumption
1
Going Bananas
18
Space Invaders
41
Altered Landscapes and Transformed Livelihoods
75
Sigatoka Science and Control
104
Revisiting the Green Prison
128
The Lives and Time of Miss Chiquita
161
La Química
193
Banana Cultures in Comparative Perspective
216
Notes
247
Bibliography
293
Index
315
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Page 1 - The first sweetened cup of hot tea to be drunk by an English worker was a significant historical event, because it prefigured the transformation of an entire society, a total remaking of its economic and social basis.

About the author (2009)

JOHN SOLURI is Associate Professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.

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