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Tobacco Capitalism: Growers, Migrant Workers, and the Changing Face of a Global Industry

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Tobacco Capitalism: Growers, Migrant Workers, and the Changing Face of a Global Industry

Contributors:

By (Author) Peter Benson

ISBN:

9780691149202

Publisher:

Princeton University Press

Imprint:

Princeton University Press

Publication Date:

30th January 2012

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Agriculture, agribusiness and food production industries

Dewey:

338.17371

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

336

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

482g

Description

Tobacco Capitalism tells the story of the people who live and work on U.S. tobacco farms at a time when the global tobacco industry is undergoing profound changes. Against the backdrop of the antitobacco movement, the globalization and industrialization of agriculture, and intense debates over immigration, Peter Benson draws on years of field research to examine the moral and financial struggles of growers, the difficult conditions that affect Mexican migrant workers, and the complex politics of citizenship and economic decline in communities dependent on this most harmful commodity. Benson tracks the development of tobacco farming since the plantation slavery period and the formation of a powerful tobacco industry presence in North Carolina. In recent decades, tobacco companies that sent farms into crisis by aggressively switching to cheaper foreign leaf have coached growers to blame the state, public health, and aggrieved racial minorities for financial hardship and feelings of vilification. Economic globalization has exacerbated social and racial tensions in North Carolina, but the corporations that benefit have rarely been considered a key cause of harm and instability, and have now adopted social-responsibility platforms to elide liability for smoking disease. Parsing the nuances of history, power, and politics in rural America, Benson explores the cultural and ethical ambiguities of tobacco farming and offers concrete recommendations for the tobacco-control movement in the United States and worldwide.

Reviews

Winner of the 2012 James Mooney Award, Southern Anthropological Society Finalist for the 2012 Society for the Anthropology of Work Book Prize "Anthropologist Benson explains the shifts in US Growers' role in the multinational tobacco industry in the last half century through his focus on North Carolina's Wilson County, at the heart of US tobacco production. He bases his work on archival and ethnographic analysis of North Carolina tobacco growers and farmworkers and, more broadly, of government and industry perspectives."--Choice "This is a big, angry, brickbat of a book. The focus of most social science research on tobacco is its consumption, so it is good to have its modes of production put under the spotlight... Its 323 pages are a worthy contribution to the literature on agribusiness and agricultural capitalism and the pernicious role of the tobacco industry in manipulating the production as well as the consumption of its product for its own immoral ends."--Andrew J. Russell, Durham Anthropology Journal

Author Bio

Peter Benson is assistant professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the coauthor of "Broccoli and Desire: Global Connections and Maya Struggles in Postwar Guatemala".

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