Imagining Future Agricultural Landscapes in a new Sudan: entitled expertise, cultural intransience and fine warm rain in the English wilds

Zetterstrom-Sharp, Johanna T. 2020. Imagining Future Agricultural Landscapes in a new Sudan: entitled expertise, cultural intransience and fine warm rain in the English wilds. History and Anthropology, 31(3), pp. 293-313. ISSN 0275-7206 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

This article sits in response to work on the rolling out of development-centred technical and scientific expertise at the decline of the British empire in Africa. Specifically, it focuses on the imagining of future agricultural landscapes in Sudan, exploring how such imagining was framed by the social and colonial worlds in which scientific knowledge about agricultural capacity in the north and south was produced. It draws on a private archive of letters, photographs and objects compiled by Roger Brain, an agricultural scientist engaged in research and census work for the University of Khartoum in Sudan between 1953 and 1959. His archive reveals the underlying assumptions, conventions and anxieties that framed the ways in which he viewed and understood the landscapes in which he worked. I argue that this framing shaped regionalised notions of inevitable technological transformation in the north, and notions of a fragile cultural distinctiveness coupled with a deep nostalgia for rural intransience in the south. Ultimately I suggest that this shaped the production of scientific knowledge by Roger Brain and others like him, woven through the production of policy and planning regarding Sudan’s economic future after independence.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2019.1669591

Additional Information:

This work was supported by the British Academy under Grant pf150102.

Keywords:

Sudan, colonialism, agriculture, development, future imaginaries, technology

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Anthropology

Dates:

DateEvent
5 August 2019Accepted
26 September 2019Published Online
2020Published

Item ID:

27382

Date Deposited:

01 Nov 2019 15:09

Last Modified:

14 Jun 2021 17:30

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/27382

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