Albert Howard and the mycorrhizal association.

Autor: Sheldrake M; University of Cambridge, Clare College, Trinity Lane, Cambridge CB2 1TL, United Kingdom. merlinsheldrake@gmail.com
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences [Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci] 2012 Mar; Vol. 43 (1), pp. 225-31. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Nov 22.
DOI: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2011.10.034
Abstrakt: Albert Howard worked as an imperial agronomist for the British Government in India. Following his retirement in 1931, he returned to England and embarked on a passionate global campaign to reform agricultural practices. Central to Howard's project was the mycorrhizal association, a symbiotic relationship between plant roots and subterranean fungi, believed to play an important part in plant nutrition. I show that there are a number of close parallels between Howard's work in India and his portrayal of the mycorrhizal association, and argue that Howard used these fungi to naturalise his imperial project. Understood in this way, these mycorrhizal and imperial associations reveal ways that Howard was able to negotiate the boundaries between the local and global, England and India, science and agriculture, institute and village, and soil and plant. In contrast to Thomas Gieryn's work on hybridisation at the cultural boundaries between science and non-science, I concentrate on Howard's use of intermediaries to negotiate and articulate specific boundaries within his imperial project. Arguing that this approach reveals limitations in Gieryn's hybrid framework, I suggest that a focus on Howard's dependence on intermediaries draws attention to the discontinuities between entities, besides the dynamic ways that they might be coupled.
(Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
Databáze: MEDLINE