Description
The crop disease, Fireblight, ravaged orchards in the United States, Canada, and New Zealand in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As part of a wider project, tracing the knowledge creation and communication surrounding this disease by fruitgrowers, scientists, and governments, this paper will focus specifically on the shifting meanings of Fireblight and its impact when a transnational focus is applied. In the context of the British Empire Dominion of Canada, fruitgrowers in the period 1880-1920 were part of a long-established and wide-ranging network of knowledge creation and communication whereby experienced orchardists with demonstrable success in fruitgrowing were considered just as much a source of ‘expert’ knowledge as academic scientists. In contrast, fruitgrowers in New Zealand in the period 1920-1939 were operating in the context of an industry in its relative infancy. The foundations of fruitgrowing (as with many other primary industries) in this Dominion were laid by the heavy involvement of the government and agricultural scientists. Through an investigation of the conversations, debates, and disagreements concerning Fireblight, this paper will conclude that the differing existing knowledge network contexts, combined with the spread of the disease from North America to a new geographic region, fostered new meanings and priorities in the discussions concerning Fireblight in an imperial orchard settingPeriod | 21 Apr 2023 |
---|---|
Event title | The Gravitational Constant, from the Local to the Universal |
Event type | Workshop |
Location | St Andrews, United KingdomShow on map |
Related content
-
Activities
-
The Gravitational Constant, from the Local to the Universal
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in or organising a conference