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English Fiction & Prose Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, Literary Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Animals & Habitats in Environmental Science, Natural Literature & History, British Imperialism & British Empire - History, Gar
Colonizing Nature by Beth Fowkes Tobin — book cover

Colonizing Nature

by Beth Fowkes Tobin
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Overview

With its control of sugar plantations in the Caribbean and tea, cotton, and indigo production in India, Britain in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries dominated the global economy of tropical agriculture. In Colonizing Nature, Beth Fowkes Tobin shows how dominion over "the tropics" as both a region and an idea became central to the way in which Britons imagined their role in the world.

Tobin examines georgic poetry, landscape portraiture, natural history writing, and botanical prints produced by Britons in the Caribbean, the South Pacific, and India to uncover how each played a crucial role in developing the belief that the tropics were simultaneously paradisiacal and in need of British intervention and management. Her study examines how slave garden portraits denied the horticultural expertise of the slaves, how the East India Company hired such artists as William Hodges to paint and thereby Anglicize the landscape and gardens of British-controlled India, and how writers from Captain James Cook to Sir James E. Smith depicted tropical lands and plants.

Just as mastery of tropical nature, and especially its potential for agricultural productivity, became key concepts in the formation of British imperial identity, Colonizing Nature suggests that intellectual and visual mastery of the tropics—through the creation of art and literature—accompanied material appropriations of land, labor, and natural resources. Tobin convincingly argues that the depictions of tropical plants, gardens, and landscapes that circulated in the British imagination provide a key to understanding the forces that shaped the British Empire.

About the Author, Beth Fowkes Tobin

Beth Fowkes Tobin is Professor of English at Arizona State University. She is the author of Picturing Imperial Power: Colonial Subjects in Eighteenth-Century British Painting and Superintending the Poor: Charitable Ladies and Paternal Landlords in British Fiction, 1770-1860.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"Tobin's analyses of paintings . . . confirm her as an indispensable commentator on imperial themes in eighteenth-century British art."—Modern Language Quarterly

Book Details

Published
November 30, 2004
Publisher
Philadelphia : PENN/University of Pennsylvania Press, c2005.
Pages
280
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780812238358

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