dc.contributor.author
Jochem, Sophia C.
dc.date.accessioned
2024-03-20T13:49:05Z
dc.date.available
2024-03-20T13:49:05Z
dc.identifier.uri
https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/42944
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-42658
dc.description.abstract
Human life under Queen Victoria was built on—or, more accurately, with—vegetables, from sugarcane, tea, and spices to cotton and indigo, tobacco and opium poppies. While the intricate and multiple economies of some of these vegetable staples have been explored in considerable detail, the highly uneven power dynamics of the Victorians’ complex, drawn-out encounters with the vegetable world mostly continue to be glossed over in simplistic terms of human appropriation and control. This essay proposes “vegetable” as a heuristic for critically engaging plants and other nonanimal growy things as sources of action in Victorianist scholarship. Drawing on thinking from the interdisciplinary field of critical plant studies, I argue that human life and ideas cannot be thought apart from vegetable materialities, especially during the Victorian period. The high degree to which human history was entangled in the vegetable world, I suggest, renders a “vegetable” heuristic indispensable to Victorianist scholarship, especially in the struggle to come to terms with its imperial inheritance.
en
dc.format.extent
4 Seiten
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject
Victorian period
en
dc.subject.ddc
900 Geschichte und Geografie::940 Geschichte Europas::941 Geschichte der Britischen Inseln
dc.type
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.doi
10.1017/S1060150323000359
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.journaltitle
Victorian Literature and Culture
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.number
3
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pagestart
539
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pageend
542
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.volume
51
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.url
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1060150323000359
refubium.affiliation
Philosophie und Geisteswissenschaften
refubium.affiliation.other
Institut für Englische Philologie
refubium.funding
Cambridge
refubium.note.author
Die Publikation wurde aus Open Access Publikationsgeldern der Freien Universität Berlin gefördert.
refubium.resourceType.isindependentpub
no
dcterms.accessRights.openaire
open access
dcterms.isPartOf.eissn
1470-1553