Biotechnology and the Politics of Plants

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A01=Matt Hodges
Agricultural biotechnology
agricultural innovation policy
anthropology of science
Apomictic Reproduction
Apomixis
Apomixis Research
Australian National University
Author_Matt Hodges
Bellagio Declaration
Category=JHMC
Category=PST
Embryo Sac
Endosperm Development
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
ethnography of biotechnology
F1 Hybrid
F1 Seed
Frontier Research
Genomics
historical analysis of apomixis development
Historical Anthropological Perspective
Historical Conditioning
Hybrid Seed
Interspecific Hybridization
Mixed plant breeding approaches
Open Source
Open Source Model
Panicum Maximum
Plant Breeding
Plant Breeding Technique
plant genetics research
PPP Contract
Processual Idiom
Public Private Partnership
Public Sector Researchers
Resource Poor Farmers
science and technology studies
Seed Corporations
temporal epistemology
Wide Hybridization

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138314528
  • Weight: 160g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Biotechnology and the Politics of Plants explores the mysterious phenomenon of ‘apomixis’, the ability of certain plants to ‘self-clone’, and its potential as a revolutionary tool for agriculture and enhancing food security, that may soon be a reality. Through historical anthropological and ethnographic study, Matt Hodges traces the development of the CIMMYT Apomixis Project, a prominent frontier research initiative, and its reinvention as a leading public-private partnership. He analyzes the fast-moving historical transition from public sector, mixed plant breeding approaches grounded in genetics, to a contemporary era of agricultural biotechnology and genomics where PPPs are a leading format, and explores how social contexts of research shape how knowledge is produced, as well as what remains ‘unknown’, and constrain the development of an ‘Apomixis Technology’. The chapters present an inventive approach informed by the anthropology of time, science and technology studies, and dialogue with the work of Gilles Deleuze, Paul Rabinow, Hannah Arendt, Andrew Pickering, and Eduardo Viveiros de Castro. Hodges outlines novel ways of integrating notions of history and becoming, and considers how apomixis offers up an alternative image of thought to theoretical concepts such as the well-known ‘rhizome’. The book makes a valuable contribution to both the growing social scientific literature on genomics and biotechnology, and recent anthropological debates on time and history.

Matt Hodges is a social and historical anthropologist based at the School of Anthropology and Conservation at the University of Kent, UK. He works on the anthropology of science and technology, and themes of history, time, and the experience of cultural transformation and rupture in rural Europe. This focus extends to the technologies and infrastructures that drive such upheavals, including agricultural biotechnology. Recent work on French radical historiography appeared in Current Anthropology 60(3).

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