
Raising Cane in the 'Glades : The Global Sugar Trade and the Transformation of Florida.
Title:
Raising Cane in the 'Glades : The Global Sugar Trade and the Transformation of Florida.
Author:
Hollander, Gail M.
ISBN:
9780226349480
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (367 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- 1 From Everglades to Sugar Bowl and Back Again? -- 2 The Sugar Question in Frontier Florida -- 3 Securing Sugar, Draining the 'Glades -- 4 Wish Fulfillment for Florida Growers: Managed Market, Disciplined Labor, Engineered Landscape -- 5 The Cold War Heats up the Nation's Sugar Bowl -- 6 A Restructured Industry -- 7 Questioning Sugar in the Everglades -- Appendix A: Biographical Sketches of Key Figures in the Transformation of the Florida Everglades -- Appendix B: Key Legislation, Trade Agreements, and Policies in the Transformation of the Florida Everglades -- Appendix C: Chronology of Principal U.S. Government Wartime Sugar Controls, 1939-1947 -- Notes -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
Over the last century, the Everglades underwent a metaphorical and ecological transition from impenetrable swamp to endangered wetland. At the heart of this transformation lies the Florida sugar industry, which by the 1990s was at the center of the political storm over the multi-billion dollar ecological "restoration" of the Everglades. Raising Cane in the 'Glades is the first study to situate the environmental transformation of the Everglades within the economic and historical geography of global sugar production and trade. Using, among other sources, interviews, government and corporate documents, and recently declassified U.S. State Department memoranda, Gail M. Hollander demonstrates that the development of Florida's sugar region was the outcome of pitched battles reaching the highest political offices in the U.S. and in countries around the world, especially Cuba-which emerges in her narrative as a model, a competitor, and the regional "other" to Florida's "self." Spanning the period from the age of empire to the era of globalization, the book shows how the "sugar question"-a label nineteenth-century economists coined for intense international debates on sugar production and trade-emerges repeatedly in new guises. Hollander uses the sugar question as a thread to stitch together past and present, local and global, in explaining Everglades transformation.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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