Reviews
Winner of the 2015 Theodore Saloutos Memorial Award from the Agricultural History Society for the year's best book on agricultural hisotry, "...Drew Swanson's A Golden Weed is [a] well-researched study of tobacco in the Old Bright Belt...Swanson examines tobacco's environmental history and deep-rooted connections to the region's culture."--Dale Coats, NCHR, "This book is a history of tobacco agriculture that will add to recent scholarship on the environmental history of staple crop plantations in the U.S. South; it is a significant contribution to this effort to re-write the agricultural history of the South in environmental terms."-Mart A. Stewart, author of "What Nature Suffers to Groe", "This book is a history of tobacco agriculture that will add to recent scholarship on the environmental history of staple crop plantations in the U.S. South; it is a significant contribution to this effort to re-write the agricultural history of the South in environmental terms."--Mart A. Stewart, author of "What Nature Suffers to Groe", "Swanson excels in delivering what his title promised: a rigorous exploration of why generations of farmer's sacrificed the integrity of the landscape they loved to grow soil-depleting tobacco. His persuasive arguments about this key issue now make it essential for future historians of southern agriculture"--Adrienne Monteith Petty, American Historical Review, "With his sure grasp of cultivation and deep insight into the social and ecological realities of growing bright-leaf tobacco, Swanson depicts a region degraded and impoverished not from simple ignorance or greed, but from a tragic inability to overcome economic and racial obstacles."-Brian Donahue, co-editor of American Georgics: Writings on Farming, Culture, and the Land and author of The Great Meadow: Farmers and the Land in Colonial Concord, "Swanson's finely grained appraisal of bright tobacco culture revises familiar accounts of commodity-crop agriculture, weaving a compelling narrative of economics, race relations, and the land in the Virginia-North Carolina Southside."--Sara M. Gregg, author of Managing the Mountains, "A Golden Weed is thus both a cultural and an environmental history; Swanson is interested in ideas about land but also in the ways that the natural environment..."--Megan Kate Nelson, The Journal of American History, " A Golden Weed is agrarian history at its best. Avoiding convenient stereotypes, Swanson vividly demonstrates how bright-leaf tobacco farmers transformed the social relations and soils of the Piedmont South."-Edward D. Melillo, Amherst College, Won the Ohio Academy of History, for the junior faculty, 2015 Publication Award which is given "to an active member of the Academy" for an "outstanding publication in the field of history issued in the year preceding the annual meeting.", "How did such a valuable crop thrive on land so poor? Why did the earth melt from under the fortunes of planters? Drew Swanson gives answers in a history of bright leaf that is also about the fate of a southern region, a plant and its environment, and the rise of the cigarette."--Steven Stoll, author of Larding the Lean Earth: Soil and Society in Nineteenth Century America, " A Golden Weed is agrarian history at its best. Avoiding convenient stereotypes, Swanson vividly demonstrates how bright-leaf tobacco farmers transformed the social relations and soils of the Piedmont South."--Edward D. Melillo, Amherst College, "How did such a valuable crop thrive on land so poor? Why did the earth melt from under the fortunes of planters? Drew Swanson gives answers in a history of bright leaf that is also about the fate of a southern region, a plant and its environment, and the rise of the cigarette."--Steven Stoll, author of Larding the Lean Earth: Soil and Society in Nineteenth Century America, "Swanson's finely grained appraisal of bright tobacco culture revises familiar accounts of commodity-crop agriculture, weaving a compelling narrative of economics, race relations, and the land in the Virginia-North Carolina Southside."-Sara M. Gregg, author of Managing the Mountains, "With his sure grasp of cultivation and deep insight into the social and ecological realities of growing bright-leaf tobacco, Swanson depicts a region degraded and impoverished not from simple ignorance or greed, but from a tragic inability to overcome economic and racial obstacles."--Brian Donahue, co-editor of American Georgics: Writings on Farming, Culture, and the Land and author of The Great Meadow: Farmers and the Land in Colonial Concord, "How did such a valuable crop thrive on land so poor? Why did the earth melt from under the fortunes of planters? Drew Swanson gives answers in a history of bright leaf that is also about the fate of a southern region, a plant and its environment, and the rise of the cigarette."-Steven Stoll, author of Larding the Lean Earth: Soil and Society in Nineteenth Century America
Topic
United States / State & Local / General, Economic History, Agriculture / General, Ecology, United States / State & Local / South (Al, Ar, Fl, Ga, Ky, La, ms, Nc, SC, Tn, VA, WV)