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Available From UC Press
Wilted
Pathogens, Chemicals, and the Fragile Future of the Strawberry Industry
Strawberries are big business in California. They are the sixth-highest-grossing crop in the state, which produces 88 percent of the nation’s favorite berry. Yet the industry is often criticized for its backbreaking labor conditions and dependence on highly toxic soil fumigants used to control fungal pathogens and other soilborne pests.
In Wilted, Julie Guthman tells the story of how the strawberry industry came to rely on soil fumigants, and how that reliance reverberated throughout the rest of the fruit’s production system. The particular conditions of plants, soils, chemicals, climate, and laboring bodies that once made strawberry production so lucrative in the Golden State have now changed and become a set of related threats that jeopardize the future of the industry.
In Wilted, Julie Guthman tells the story of how the strawberry industry came to rely on soil fumigants, and how that reliance reverberated throughout the rest of the fruit’s production system. The particular conditions of plants, soils, chemicals, climate, and laboring bodies that once made strawberry production so lucrative in the Golden State have now changed and become a set of related threats that jeopardize the future of the industry.
Julie Guthman is a geographer and Distinguished Professor in Sociology at University of California, Santa Cruz. Her previous books include Wilted: Pathogens, Chemicals, and the Fragile Future of the Strawberry Industry.
"Why is it so difficult to stop using dangerous chemicals to grow strawberries? Wilted explains how fumigating strawberries against fungal pathogens became part of a package with strawberry breeding, university science, land values, powerful distributors, and vulnerable, poorly compensated labor. If you are looking for a critical, multispecies description of the plantation condition today, this is the book to read. You’ll also learn how strawberries have become something quite different than those your grandmother might have savored."––Anna Tsing, coeditor of Feral Atlas: The More-than-Human Anthropocene
"Julie Guthman, in the wake of her pathbreaking book Agrarian Dreams, now runs headlong into the agro-industrial monster of California’s strawberry fields. Wilted brilliantly exposes the deadly intersection of grower capitalism, agricultural expertise in the business of system restoration, and what Guthman calls the nonhuman entities and forces that both collaborate and interrupt the operations of the industry. It is contradictory, turbulent, fragile, and operating at the limits of repair. The strawberry ‘more-than-human’ assemblage stumbles and lurches forward, intransigent, durable, and seemingly unreformable, rushing toward the apocalypse. A tour de force."––Michael J. Watts, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley
"Julie Guthman’s new book elegantly ties together a complex of work, land, capital, ecology, and knowledge to present a rich and gripping analysis of the crisis in California strawberry production, and its possible futures."––Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System
"I couldn’t put this book down. By systematically unpacking the politics (and limits) of repair, Julie Guthman explains why industrial strawberries are both victim and perpetrator of the Anthropocene. I’ll never look at the fruit the same again!"––Michael Carolan, author of The Food Sharing Revolution: How Start-Ups, Pop-Ups, and Co-Ops Are Changing the Way We Eat
"Julie Guthman, in the wake of her pathbreaking book Agrarian Dreams, now runs headlong into the agro-industrial monster of California’s strawberry fields. Wilted brilliantly exposes the deadly intersection of grower capitalism, agricultural expertise in the business of system restoration, and what Guthman calls the nonhuman entities and forces that both collaborate and interrupt the operations of the industry. It is contradictory, turbulent, fragile, and operating at the limits of repair. The strawberry ‘more-than-human’ assemblage stumbles and lurches forward, intransigent, durable, and seemingly unreformable, rushing toward the apocalypse. A tour de force."––Michael J. Watts, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley
"Julie Guthman’s new book elegantly ties together a complex of work, land, capital, ecology, and knowledge to present a rich and gripping analysis of the crisis in California strawberry production, and its possible futures."––Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System
"I couldn’t put this book down. By systematically unpacking the politics (and limits) of repair, Julie Guthman explains why industrial strawberries are both victim and perpetrator of the Anthropocene. I’ll never look at the fruit the same again!"––Michael Carolan, author of The Food Sharing Revolution: How Start-Ups, Pop-Ups, and Co-Ops Are Changing the Way We Eat