Orchard in the Ruins

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A01=Tiago Saraiva
Author_Tiago Saraiva
Category=JBCC4
Category=NHTB
Category=PDX
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
forthcoming

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226848013
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Ingeniously connects the history of citrus cultivation to the production and maintenance of whiteness in sites around the world.

In The Orchard in the Ruins, acclaimed historian Tiago Saraiva illuminates the global impact of cloning Californian oranges, a practice that emerged in the aftermath of the great depression of the 1890s. Cloning promised control, uniformity, and resistance to an array of environmental and economic threats. But Californian orchards—white-owned but tended by workers of Chinese, Japanese, Mexican, or Indigenous origin—were also places where plantations and race intertwined. Agricultural anxieties about strains of oranges and their value, Saraiva shows, formed a continuum with anxieties about vanishing whiteness.

The Orchard in the Ruins connects Californian history to other sites of citrus cultivation: South Africa, where concerns about white poverty grew during the early twentieth century; Mandatory Palestine, where orchards were key to Zionist undertakings; colonial Algeria, where French settlers transformed the landscape with European farming techniques; and Brazil, where orchards were cultivated post-abolition. Drawing on local histories as well as the works of John Dewey, J. M. Coetzee, Edward Said, Frantz Fanon, and artist Tarsila do Amaral, Saraiva shows that in each place, orchards grew in the wake of specific historical crises. Orange cultivation was a transnational project in cultivating whiteness, one in which studies of fruits, buds, rootstocks, fungi, and viruses became race-making experiments.

A must-read for anyone interested in the history of science, technology, agriculture, and race, The Orchard in the Ruins reveals a troubled account of science-led attempts to remedy crumbling worlds.

Tiago Saraiva is professor of history at Drexel University. He is the author of Fascist Pigs: Technoscientific Organisms and the History of Fascism; the coauthor of Moving Crops and the Scales of History; and the coeditor of Nature Remade: Engineering Life, Envisioning Worlds, published by the University of Chicago Press.

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