Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-04T08:56:18.553Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cultivating “Care”: Colonial Botany and the Moral Lives of Oil Palm at the Twentieth Century’s Turn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2022

Alice Rudge*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University College London, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This paper draws on archival research to trace the techniques used by scientists and government officials involved with palm oil at the turn of the twentieth century. For them, mundane practices of “carefulness” were paramount as they worked on collecting, identifying, marketing, and improving the oil palm. But they also applied this so-called care to people: care of the oil palm was thought to presuppose care of the “native,” providing a correction for what were seen as “careless” local manners of cultivation. Colonial techniques of care thus sought to encompass both plants and peoples within contemporary liberal rhetorics of efficiency and moral improvement. This embodies how scientific and political care can interlink through their undersides of control, exploitation, and domination, which remain obscured by narratives of care themselves. Examining these links between commodity histories and scientific techniques is therefore essential for understanding environmental and social concerns regarding oil palm plantations today. An awareness of the afterlives of colonial discourses might encourage a more critical “care” in response to these issues today, challenging taken-for-granted notions of the benefits of corporate care.

Type
Engineering Ecology
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History

Colonizing Care

In 1889, the first documented attempt to cultivate a plantation of African Oil Palms in Malaysia failed (Oil Palm 1889). Yet by 1907, Henry Nicholas Ridley, the British Director of Singapore’s Botanic Gardens, felt justified in stating that the African Oil Palm (Elaeis guineensis) should be cultivated “for profit” in Southeast Asia since it gave a “good return in Africa at little expense” (Reference Ridley1907: 37). His statement drew on decades of back-and-forth correspondence among trading companies, colonial officials, and botanic gardens who had long been considering a cross-continental move for this plant from its homes in West and Central Africa. Today, this move has come to shape not only the landscapes of Malaysia and Indonesia (as just two examples), but also the ways people around the world consume packaged snacks, cook, wash their hair, feed their livestock, and fuel their cars.Footnote 1 This has had enormous societal, environmental, and economic impacts, creating what is now termed the “oil palm complex” (Cramb and McCarthy Reference Cramb and McCarthy2018). This denies simplistic notions of center and periphery: Indonesia and Malaysia currently provide the majority of the world’s supply to centers of consumption in China and India (Byerlee, Falcon, and Naylor Reference Byerlee, Falcon and Naylor2017).

But the oil palm is not a new food crop. Across West Africa, people have been developing food and other uses of oil palms for millennia. There is evidence for its early use in Ghana during the late Holocene (Logan and D’Andrea Reference Logan and D’Andrea2012). It is also prominent in culinary and material cultures elsewhere in the region, from Senegal to Angola, where it has been consumed and traded for centuries. Throughout west and Central Africa and as far east as Tanzania, its oils are used in cooking, soap, and as a light fuel. It is favored as a condiment for fufu (Watkins Reference Watkins2011; Martin Reference Martin1988), can be used to make palm wine, and as a medicine. For example, it is a Yoruba treatment for smallpox (Robins Reference Robins2021: 21).

In the eighteenth century, European visitors to West Africa began to take note of the “quality of the soap made from palm and palm kernel oils, mixed with ashes from palm fronds” (ibid.: 18; Watkins Reference Watkins2021: 186). By the 1790s, these foreigners were experimenting with making their own palm oil soaps (Robins Reference Robins2021: 41) and the trade in “black soap” had become essential to the Portuguese economy (Watkins Reference Watkins2021: 186). By the 1900s British industries had found palm oil to be a useful substitute for other oleaginous substances in food, soaps, candles, tinplating, and industrial lubricants, and as a precursor for making new chemicals needed in the industrial age (Robins Reference Robins2021: 74). By the 1920s, the palm was being planted in earnest in plantations across Southeast Asia. These early plantations laid the groundwork for the enormous expansion that oil palm plantations underwent in the region after the Second World War. In Malaysia, following independence and aided by government incentives, the land covered by the palm exploded from 55,000 hectares in 1961 to 5 million by 2017, and the country’s share of the world export market for palm oil rose from 9 percent in the mid-1950s to 73 percent in 1983 (Byerlee, Falcon, and Naylor Reference Byerlee, Falcon and Naylor2017: 28). Scientific practices and values that developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were central to this massive expansion. Today, similar scientific and managerial techniques that grew out of this period of transplantation and massive expansion are used to justify agro-industrial palm oil expansion in Brazil (Watkins Reference Watkins2021: 216–17) and elsewhere.

Often, European scientific knowledge grew out of encounters with local knowledges, which became subject to colonial practices of “translation” (Bewell Reference Bewell2017; Raj Reference Raj2007: 18). Yet the mechanisms and techniques by which oil palm was translated (and transplanted) remain underexplored. This article focuses on how local knowledges and uses of oil palms were turned into “immutable mobiles” that became central to European attempts at “domination at a distance” (Latour Reference Latour1987: 221–25). In so doing, it tells of the broader moral values that shaped palm oil expansion at the turn of the twentieth century, in which interlinked notions of careful scientific work and the moral improvement of colonial subjects through cultivation came to the fore.Footnote 2 Care, cultivation, and colony—the etymologies of each of these English terms are linked through their origins in the Latin term colere: “to till, tend, care for” (Moore, Kosek, and Pandian Reference Moore, Kosek, Pandian, Moore, Kosek and Pandian2003: 9). In the later nineteenth century these ideals regarding cultivation and colonialism were grafted onto “much older discourses of imperial providence and ‘improvement’” (Ross Reference Ross2017: 9; Drayton Reference Drayton2000).

My focus on how moral ideals of care intersected with practical techniques of scientific, botanical, and bureaucratic carefulness grows from tracing a historical biography of the oil palm through official documents, letters, reports, and notes contained within the economic botany archive collection at London’s Kew Gardens (RBGK ECB/8/1 634.622, “Oil Palm: Manuscripts and Reprints Bound Together 1876–1913”).Footnote 3 I view this collection alongside Kew directors’ correspondence (RBGK DC) and contemporary secondary literature such as Kew’s Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information and other publications. Sources therein include not only memos, reports, and requests written by Kew officials, but also materials sent to them by government officials, trading companies, research institutes, and naturalists around the world. These offer a broad picture of the issues, assumptions, and priorities of Europeans who were encountering oil palms and their produce at that time. Being largely authored for practical purposes, these sources demonstrate not only a timeline of events but also the machinations and techniques through which caring attitudes were made effective.

The circulation of knowledge about plants between botanical gardens around the world was a form of empire-making, in which institutions like Kew facilitated the “despotic paternalism” of the British Empire (Drayton Reference Drayton2000: 227). Being central to the industrial revolution, palm oil had a particular significance for Britain, which would wind up controlling “the heart of the oil palm belt” after the “scramble for Africa” (Robins Reference Robins2021: 3). Due to my focus on English-language sources at Kew, this paper will highlight British priorities, yet other European colonizing nations, too, helped develop the scientific processes that became central to Elaeis guineensis’s proliferation.Footnote 4 Also central were the diverse Indigenous knowledges of this plant that only make themselves known in the archives through their omissions, or in ventriloquized form, in British-authored sources. Though this paper explores Elaeis through the lens of the British colonial experience, I contextualize this through attention to what is masked in the British record, which often comes to light through European frustrations as they attempted to co-opt and streamline the knowledge about Elaeis that they believed they were “discovering” (Stoler Reference Stoler2010: 1–4).Footnote 5

The intense bureaucratic, enumerative, and classificatory activity around the oil palm at the turn of the twentieth century is not unique. It can be contextualized within the British context of increasing numeracy, literacy, Gladstonian fiscalism, and actuarial thinking in the mid-eighteenth century (Appadurai Reference Appadurai, Breckenridge and van der Veer1993). Enumeration, quantification, measurement, and classification were all carefully employed to “manage [the] mess and heterogeneity” that otherwise might have consumed the colonial office as it set about documenting the peoples and resources of the colonies (Verran Reference Verran2001: 72). In British discourses around Elaeis, these became practices of scientific care and carefulness, described as such in its identification and classification, harvesting, planting, processing, and trade. Through this carefulness, Elaeis was translated into an object worthy of scientific attention (Daston Reference Daston2000; Reference Daston2004). The plant—its seeds, leaves, inflorescences, and oils—all had to be subsumed, rendered artefacts in a standardized format to become knowable to colonial officers and politicians. The botanists based at colonial botanic gardens played an important role here, carefully standardizing and presenting this plant such that knowledge of it could be communicated among the confusion of letters between gardens and colonies. The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew was at the center of this work at the century’s turn (Brockway Reference Brockway2002), exemplifying how botanic gardens have been part of shaping European views of “the tropics” (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil, Krige and Pestre1997; Grove Reference Grove1996; Arnold Reference Arnold2014). Gardens such as Kew were laboratories “in which a teeming, disturbing, savage nature had to be tamed, ultimately disciplined, boxed in” (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil, Krige and Pestre1997: 83). Through everyday scientific practices of care rooted through these gardens, the oil palm became both an object and a tool of empire.

My approach is necessarily interdisciplinary, bringing together discourses on care in STS and narratives from environmental history and the history of science. This interdisciplinarity is essential since botanists and colonial officials used “care” in two forms. First, care was expressed as carefulness. Botanists expressed the need for extreme carefulness in the collection and transport of their specimens. They learned and taught skills of careful identification, observation, breeding, and experimentation. This points to how care is an affectively charged mode of attention or concern. It is more than a mere stance; it is practical and has material consequences as a “concrete work of maintenance” (Puig De La Bellacasa Reference Puig De La Bellacasa2017: 4). Care not only structures how scientists come to know but is integral to science’s inspiration (Daston Reference Daston1995: 3). Yet care is a deeply ambivalent “selective mode of attention: it circumscribes and cherishes some things, lives, or phenomena as its objects. In the process, it excludes others. Practices of care are always shot through with asymmetrical power relations” (Martin, Myers, and Viseu Reference Martin, Myers and Viseu2015: 627). Scientific care, through techniques of carefulness, has long been used to organize, discipline, and classify human and non-human bodies. Botanic gardens are primary sites in which to examine this process because they are places where an “attitude” of ownership toward plants and people came into being (Tuhiwai Smith Reference Tuhiwai Smith2012: 58).

In this way, careful scientific practice was linked to a second form of care: the broader narratives of care associated with ideologies of improvement and use. As such, care offers an analytic framework that allows for the rhetoric of use and improvement identified by Drayton (Reference Drayton2000) to be understood in relation to the micro-practices of scientists and officials, reflecting how ethics of care were both enacted through scientific practice and grounded in everyday bureaucratic communications with and about botanic gardens. As carefulness became the valued scientific skill of the time, colonial subjects were branded as uncareful and in need of moral improvement. While the new science of botany became an opportunity for the creation of power and social capital, epistemological (and physical) violence was being done in the colonies, as European colonizers sought to force the colonized to “improve” themselves by imitating colonial practices of care.

Palm oil’s story is not radically different from other crops that colonial governments transplanted to new locations. Rubber, cinchona, sisal (Brockway Reference Brockway2002), and others received similar treatment. Indeed, the palm oil trade in Malaysia built on the infrastructures and systems of forced labor already in place for rubber (Giacomin Reference Giacomin2018b; Kaur Reference Kaur2014), which in turn had built upon those developed for sugar (Lees Reference Lees2017). Despite this, the oil palm is more commonly seen as one of the many “Anthropocene” phenomena that define our current epoch—a symptom of modernity and a death-knell for humanity’s future (Haraway Reference Haraway2015). Yet, the oil palm today is tied to its past (Trouillot Reference Trouillot2015: 15), and after tracing its biography, this paper will compare earlier narratives of care with those found in the palm oil industry today, particularly as they are embedded within discourses on corporate care. For this, I rely on industry and NGO reports, corporation marketing campaigns, and secondary ethnographic literature. These make clear the ongoing legacy in the industry of notions of care and carefulness as both practical techniques and moral concepts. Discourses on scientific care for plants, and colonial “care” for people, were and still are interlinked. Care remains a powerful narrative that masks its own troubling undersides and implications in unequal power relations.

Today, consumers in the global North are often encouraged to care about palm oil. A visitor might marvel at Kew’s careful curation of exotic plants as exemplifying the “wonders of a fast-vanishing world,” while at the same time they are encouraged to care about the “environmental impact of massive oil palm plantations” (Teltscher Reference Teltscher2020: 308). Consumers may come to care about plantations’ effects on orangutans, biodiverse rainforest environments, and (less often) the displacement of Indigenous peoples and smallholders in Southeast Asia.Footnote 6 But as people and corporations express and enact care about these issues, such narratives may again obfuscate the histories of environmental, scientific, and social care that coalesce around palm oil. Following how those associated with palm oil expressed and enacted techniques of care and carefulness in the decades when the industry began expanding globally reveals that its development in ways that have harmed so many was not inevitable. This casts light on care’s less benevolent history and offers insights into how one might foster more critical forms of environmental, scientific, and social care in the present day.

Encountering Elaeis

It is likely that Elaeis guineensis first became known to Europeans around the beginning of the Atlantic slave trade. The first European botanist to name it was not in West Africa but French Martinique: Dutch botanist Nikolaus Jacquin in his Selectarum Stirpium, Americanarum historia, first published in 1763 (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 37; Robins Reference Robins2021: 10). Jacquin named it after what he assumed was the plant’s native home: Guinea. In the Caribbean, British colonists valued the palms for ornamental purposes. Their tall, imposing presence likely provided structural border markers between estate and plantation, and lined avenues and squares (Casid Reference Casid2005: 11). Writing from Jamaica’s botanic gardens in 1876, botanist and gardener George Samuel Jenman, Superintendent of the British gardens in Guiana (and later of the botanic gardens in Jamaica), told Kew Gardens Director Joseph Dalton Hooker that he would happily oblige his request to further examine the Elaeis that he found growing in Jamaica “in great abundance.”Footnote 7 He does not mention that Elaeis would have arrived since 1655 with the millions of enslaved Africans the British transported to Jamaica to work their sugar plantations.

On board ships, the oil was used as food for slaves, and some was reserved for African doctors to use for medicinal purposes (Osseo-Asare Reference Osseo-Asare2014: 82; Robins Reference Robins2021: 39). Slaves would then have their shoulders smeared with the oil before being branded with the mark of trading companies (Robins Reference Robins2021: 31). The Portuguese-African trade in both slaves and palm oil goes back even earlier, to the early sixteenth century, when “palm oil seasoned and enriched the various gruels that sustained captives awaiting transport and during the Middle Passage. On arrival in the New World, sailors and dockhands rubbed enslaved bodies with palm oil to tone their skin and ‘ready’ them for sale” (Watkins Reference Watkins2015, 19). The beginnings of the European relationship with palm oil are, then, inextricably intertwined with the history of chattel slavery. Yet palm oil was also central to resistance across the Americas: enslaved people planted oil palms on subsistence plots, where they were both central for sustenance and formed part of symbolic religious practices, thus becoming part of the ongoing survival of Candomblé, Santeria, Voudou, and Obeah (Carney and Rosomoff Reference Carney and Rosomoff2010: 170; Robins Reference Robins2021: 35; Watkins Reference Watkins2015: 19).Footnote 8

In England, palm oil was not the prevalent commodity it is today, though people did know of it. They, too, used it for medicinal purposes such as treating chilblains, and though this practice had waned by the nineteenth century, Europeans marveled at African medicinal knowledge of palm oil. There was even a roaring trade in “fake” palm oil in Britain (Robins Reference Robins2021: 37–39). But palm oil remained of negligible interest to the British public even at the beginning of the nineteenth century.Footnote 9 Traders, who never stepped off their boats when trading in palm oil, held “quaint” beliefs about this palm, such as that the oil came from the plant’s roots (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 10). Not until later in the eighteenth century did the network of plant collectors in correspondence with Kew become interested in Elaeis, though even then, it does not appear that in their encounters with Elaeis they subjected it to particular scrutiny in comparison with other species. Nonetheless, the work of those early collectors was a central foundation to the shapes that Elaeis would later take.

Collectors who sent Elaeis specimens back to Kew often did so at the behest of successive directors of Kew Gardens. Botanist and explorer Joseph Banks was the first, though unofficial, director of the gardens during its early days (his position was formalized in 1797). Following his death, the gardens lay dormant until, during a period of rapid British expansion overseas, they were taken over by the state in 1841. William Jackson (W. J.) Hooker was appointed the first formal Director of the gardens within its new situation as part of the ever-expanding colonial state. In 1865 he was succeeded by his son, Joseph Dalton (J. D.) Hooker. Joseph, in turn, passed the Kew directorship onto his son-in-law, William Thiselton-Dyer, in 1885. This ensured almost a century of family rule, until David Prain took over in 1905. As the directorship passed between these men, they presided over different phases in the “polycentric communications network” (Chambers and Gillespie Reference Chambers and Gillespie2000) that facilitated Elaeis guineensis’s many journeys.

Plant collecting as an endeavor of empire was cemented during Banks’ tenure at Kew. He would send botanists out on voyages to bring back exotic plants. These trips may have been purely botanical in scope, or there may have been joint motives of botanical discovery and colonization (Brockway Reference Brockway2002: 84). In the nineteenth century, botanists often encountered Elaeis either growing semi-wild or cultivated as an ornamental or for practical uses as a foodstuff. As with other potentially useful plants, they also took Elaeis seeds provided by Kew with them when they traveled to experiment with transplanting them in new locales, though not always successfully. In 1850, for instance, one British botanist lamented that the Kew Elaeis seeds he had taken to Ceylon had all been eaten by ants.Footnote 10 Correspondents often addressed such seemingly mundane topics, but as letters continued to fly from around the world into the Hookers’s reigns at Kew, the resulting networks of collectors became “possibly the single most important tool of the imperial scientific endeavour” (Endersby Reference Endersby2010: 84). Collecting became an “essential tool for negotiating who had scientific and social authority and how they could use it” (ibid.: 54). The care that collectors were taught to take in handling, documenting, and transporting the seeds demonstrated this—it was essential that seeds got to Kew in a state that would allow them to be examined, or even germinated so experts could study living specimens and cross-reference them with botanical books and specimens sent by previous collectors (ibid.).

One German botanist and erstwhile Kew gardener, Gustav Mann, wrote to Kew in 1859 from Equatorial Guinea that he had been sick, but had found some birds’ nests made from Elaeis guineensis. Footnote 11 Mann had been recommended by W. J. Hooker to Lord John Russell (British Prime Minister, 1846–1852, 1865–1866) as an appropriate botanist to join an imperial survey: the “Niger Expedition” (Drayton Reference Drayton2000: 203). In 1860, having made it to the mouth of the Niger, he sent some Elaeis seeds, writing, “I have passed a most tiresome time in the rainy season … the things I had on board [the ship] will scarcely reach England in good condition.” His plants, including Elaeis seeds, were gathered “with much difficulty.”Footnote 12 Yet Mann commented on not only plants but also people and their agricultural practices. He dismissed the island of Bioko (then Fernando Po) as “entirely uncultivated,” with cotton “growing very well without being looked after, quite wild only taken by the people there when they have nothing else to do.” Their fields, he surmised, “could scarcely be called so.” Their methods of palm oil cultivation he likewise found insufficient: “The men bring the nut from the tree to their houses and the women make and sell the oil. The island could give ten times as much Palm oil if the Boobies would make use of all that is going here.”Footnote 13 Politicians such as Russell hoped that the British would both “identify the crop” and “teach [the African] how to wield his spade,” uplifting them from “sloth and depravity” (ibid.: 233). Mann’s search for botanical knowledge was thus not neutral or merely a quest to fill Kew’s herbarium; collecting knowledge of “raw materials” was seen as a specialized scientific craft and also a moral undertaking in the service of improving humanity (Mignolo Reference Mignolo2011: 12–13; Drayton Reference Drayton2000; Endersby Reference Endersby2010).

With this combined, developing focus on agricultural efficiency, profit, and the development of “natives,” later into the nineteenth century, not just naturalists but also British mercantile companies became particularly interested in palm oil and how Kew could help them increase supplies (Lynn Reference Lynn1992; 1981). With this change, Elaeis began to take on a more prominent role. Trading companies, too, became drawn into the existing correspondence networks since they hoped that Kew could advise them on whether there were more productive varieties of Elaeis. For them, too, careful collecting practice was paramount. A series of letters in December 1876 between William Thiselton-Dyer—not yet Kew’s Director but based there under his father-in-law—and the Liverpool-based commission house James Irvine, indicates the complexity of this: they debated at what point of ripeness the seeds should be sent, and how they should be selected “carefully” and packed dry in an air-tight barrel.Footnote 14 By the following January, the commission house wrote that they had “the pleasure in advising [Kew], that I have this day sent off a small parcel of palm kernels which was specially selected…. They are as fresh as it is possible to get them in the circumstances, and I hope they will germinate—I am told that they have repeatedly been planted and have always failed to grow; however with the extra advantages of Kew and Kew Superintendents perhaps they may grow with you.”Footnote 15 As the palm oil trade between West Africa and Britain was in its early years, the care of the Elaeis seed in situ, in the colonies, in transit, and at Kew became care of the empire’s interests.

Marketing Elaeis

As these letters traveled back and forth, they facilitated a series of developments in the palm oil trade. During the early years of its trade to Britain, Europeans did not consider palm oil a foodstuff. Used to bland oils, they thought its taste, color, and odor were too strong (Robins Reference Robins2018). Yet its emerging popularity for making soap meant that the palm oil trade expanded from a negligible 112 tons per year exported from West Africa to Britain in 1807, to 11,000–14,000 tons per year in the 1830s.Footnote 16 It became so popular for soap that in 1853 British Chancellor William Gladstone (Liberal Party), agreed to abolish the excise tax on soap, and framed this explicitly not only in terms of care for the health and prosperity of the nation, but as an anti-slavery exercise: abolishing the soap tax would offer an increased incentive for slavers to trade in palm oil instead, and offer a “legitimate” revenue (Gladstone Reference Gladstone1853). Botanist Berthold Carl Seemann wrote in 1856 that, by offering an alternative to the African “traffic in slaves,” the oil palm presented a unique opportunity for a plant to exercise “moral and physical” improvement of African nations (Reference Seemann1856). A technique was developed to treat palm oil’s fatty acids so that it could be used to make stearic candles, after which companies such as London Prices Patent Candle Company began using the antislavery narrative as a marketing tool (Martin Reference Martin1988: 28). That palm oil was known to the British because of the slave trade was not mentioned, nor was the fact that the trade had been already abolished in Britain for almost fifty years and yet no “legitimate” trade had replaced it. Other post-abolition trades in pepper, tin, ivory, gold dust, rice, and gum copal had failed to halt the traffic in human bodies (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 10). Still, those involved with palm oil increasingly viewed their work as a moral endeavor not only in the service of Britain but in caring for those who would no longer have to suffer from slavery. Indeed, one of the stated purposes of Russell’s Niger Expedition, on which Mann made his observations of Elaeis, was to find a legitimate trade to replace slavery (Drayton Reference Drayton2000: 203).

These developments helped the palm oil trade expand to 25,000–30,000 tons per year in the 1860s,Footnote 17 but rather than contributing to the demise of the illegal slave trade, the twinned trades in palm oil and slaves continued to expand alongside one another. For example, the international slave trade from the Bight of Biafra peaked in the 1820s and remained brisk through the 1830s, demonstrating how both trades co-existed for decades (Northrup Reference Northrup1976: 354–57). Increased demand for palm oil also meant an increase in domestic forms of slave-trading and systems of unfree labor (Lovejoy Reference Lovejoy2011: 160). In Ibadan, slavery was reorganized for agricultural production and carrying oil to the coast (ibid.: 174). And throughout Biafra, wealthy individuals were able to consolidate “their position in society through the control of lineage land, trade, and the acquisition of slaves and pawns” (ibid.: 178). One famous case was Jaja, once himself enslaved, who rose, through his commercial palm oil establishments, to become the ruler of Opobo and own over a thousand slaves (ibid.: 180).

Palm oil trade was also used as a cover for slavery (Robins Reference Robins2021: 45). Anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston recorded the life history of Oluale Kossola, the last living survivor of the last slave ship of the middle passage, the Clotilda. His story recounts how, although capturing slaves from across the Atlantic had been illegal for over fifty years, two slaveholders from Alabama saw a local report that said the King of Dahomey was running a brisk trade in slaves. They outfitted their ship the Clotilda for “contraband cargo” and set out for the Bight of Benin, anchoring at Ouidah in 1859, where Kossola and others were held. The ship’s clearance papers stated, “She was sailing for the west coast for a cargo of red palm oil” (Hurston Reference Hurston and Plant2018: 7). The slave trade was thus able to co-exist on multiple levels with the supposedly “legitimate” trade in palm oil. Indeed, many abolitionists of the time did not oppose the institution of slavery, only the trade in slaves (Robins Reference Robins2021: 52).

Despite these failures, the palm oil trade from West Africa to Britain would again expand to over 87,000 tons per year by 1911, when it began to be used in the tin plate industry to prevent oxidation, and the palm kernels became a valued cattle cake after their oil had been extracted (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 12–13). Only in 1902 did it start to be used in margarine, when the development of hydrogenation unexpectedly enabled producers to strip the oil of its taste and smell (Robins Reference Robins2018: 329). By the 1930s it was a key food for Europeans (ibid.: 330). The interest in palm oil grew for ports in London, Liverpool, and Bristol, with various trading and shipping companies vying for exports, and this created tensions in the Niger Delta. Contrary to narratives of salvation, by the 1850s–1860s “aggressive behaviour” was noted between British traders “determined to stop at nothing” and local middlemen, and British assaults on Nigerians were commonplace. This led to appeals for British imperial intervention to “re-establish some order” (Lynn Reference Lynn1981: 348), and to the formation of the Royal Niger Company, which paved the way for British control in the lower Niger and various iterations of colonial control in the region until Nigerian independence in 1960. In this way, the palm oil trade had a major impact on the development of British imperialism in the region (ibid.: 331). Suffusing this was palm oil’s marketing as a means of enacting care.

Knowing Elaeis

As these developments took place, botanists continued to develop their knowledge of plants, including Elaeis, through detailed observation, and to share these observations with Kew. The Kew archives contain the proceedings of an 1879 Meeting of the Committee of the Agri-Horticultural society of Madras, which record the Basel Mission in India’s success with introducing oil palm seeds from the Gold Coast:

The Oil-palm garden is situated just in front of the Mission House. The soil is of laterite formation … yet there flourish Casuarinas, high Teak trees, Poinciana regis, Acacias, the Ficus Indica, and the young Oil-palms are as healthy and luxuriant as if they were planted in their African home. The palms are now ten years old, the seedlings having been put out in 1869 at a distance of about ten feet. The palms form now magnificent sheaves of pinnate foliage, and if only elevated to be the crowns of high trunks, they would prove worthy companions of the feathery cocoanut, the slender reach, and the stately palmyra.… Two years ago the Oil-palms yielded their first fruits, which have all been used for obtaining new seedlings, and last year I got a box full of such plants, which are all thriving in my “Experimental Garden.” … At a later period the leaves become pinnate and resemble those of the wild Date … the ribs are very strong and gracefully curved back, and the petiole is armed with powerful thorns which, in their amplexicauline tendency, afford a formidable protection of the nuts which protrude in clusters from their axillary position.Footnote 18

Typical observers such as this were “learning to be affected,” to notice and to care about the micro-details of their plants (Latour Reference Latour2004: 205), this in itself being seen as a worthwhile pursuit. Botanists had long sought to foster the skill of careful observation as the marker of their craft, mirroring developments in other scientific disciplines (Daston Reference Daston2008). Yet the boom in trade meant that traders now felt a need for knowledge of how to gain as much oil from the palms as efficiently as possible. They sought Kew’s help, and so the observations and measurements of Elaeis that Kew and its networks held were put in service to answer a question that would puzzle officials for decades: within the species Elaeis guineensis, was there a particular variety of that would offer a higher yield, making processing more efficient? Interest coalesced around a particular property—shell thickness. Thinner shells, it was hoped, would make processing more efficient. Across diverse linguistic contexts, African ways of naming the varieties of Elaeis had long encoded the specificities of their habits, the nature of how they reproduced, and the best ways to cultivate them, including in relation to shell thickness. Despite this, local names for oil palms were considered a frustrating hindrance as European officials struggled to systematize them according to their own botanical epistemologies so as to find the thinnest-shelled variety.

This frustration may have grown out of botany’s long concern with developing a consistent naming system. At the beginning of the nineteenth century botanical collecting, research, and classification already had a long history. Yet British botany remained in the process of becoming stabilized as an “autonomous and distinctive field of enquiry,” a distinct scientific discipline that could sit alongside the other rational sciences as a legitimate profession and offer the potential for prestige, recognition, and the social capital linked with being a “scientist” (Baber Reference Baber2016). With this developing opportunity for social capital, naming and classifying were considered essential ways of translating plants and knowledge about them into new contexts (Raj Reference Raj2007), in turn cementing botany as a discipline characterized by “permanence” (Daston Reference Daston2004: 154). Local naming systems did not, it was thought, fit in with this project. So, while local users and cultivators of these plants had complex and systematic naming systems for this well-loved plant, these were masked by British (and wider European) arrogance. In his 1912 report on “The Oil Palm and Its Varieties,” the Assistant Conservator of Forests for the eastern province of Nigeria, J.H.J. Farquhar, concluded “The names given by the native to palm fruits are most unreliable; at different periods of development or ripeness of the fruits distinctive names are given them. The fruits in the early stages appear as small elongated drupes, flossy purplish-black in colour, with the stigmas adhering to them. The colour, size and shape of the fruit alter as they ripen, whilst they lose to a large extent the stigmas; all these stages in the development of fruits are honoured with distinctive names.”Footnote 19 The skill of observing, of noticing minute differences between varieties was increasingly becoming recognized as offering the potential for great effects in terms of isolating particularly useful traits, but this skill, as with observation, was considered largely unattainable by the uninitiated (read, non-European) (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil2019).

In the attempt to discover whether thinner-shelled palms could be considered a variety of Elaeis worthy of a name and investigation, British scientists began making minute measurements of shell thickness. This was of particular concern to the Secretary of State for the Colonies, successive Directors of Kew Gardens, and the West African Trade Association. In 1908, the Secretary wrote directly to David Prain at Kew, forwarding a copy of a letter from the West African Trade AssociationFootnote 20 stating that he “would be glad to be favoured with any observations that you may desire to make” regarding “a species of palm which bears soft-shelled kernels, inquiry into which might lead to good results.”Footnote 21 Debate ensued regarding whether this was a new variety or variance due to the conditions of growth. It was agreed that more samples were needed at Kew. Yet Prain was doubtful they had identified a new variety: he argued that even the Conservator of Forests for Southern Nigeria, “known to be a careful observer,” was unacquainted with this soft-shelled variety.Footnote 22 “Careful” observation was key to understanding these micro-differences that could be of use to the empire, yet again British researchers were reliant on the work of Nigerians for this. One contributor of data for an influential report on the oil palm published in the Government Gazette of 1908 was Thomas B. Dawodu, a Nigerian of Ebute Mette, Lagos.Footnote 23 He was trained at botanic gardens in Jamaica and Kew, later becoming Assistant Curator of Lagos Botanic Station.Footnote 24 Circulation of people as well as plants was thus critical to the project of empire, yet at the same time, careful measurements came to stand in for local knowledge and understandings, becoming ways of discrediting African knowledges of the palm (Tuhiwai Smith Reference Tuhiwai Smith2012: 44). In 1908, Prain’s response to the West African Trade Association was one of frustration: “Careful and exhaustive reports” had already been published in his institution’s bulletin, he stated, and the matter was closed.Footnote 25

Naming and classification, then, was considered a moral undertaking in the service of empire. There was little to no recognition that Igbo or Efik naming systems for Elaeis might represent knowledges of the palm and its habits that the European botanists were unable to grasp. Yet colonial scientific observation did increasingly involve not only the plant’s varieties, but also the practices of those who grew them and their methods for classifying, identifying, naming, and cultivating (see Figures 1 and 2). This was a process of “annexing native knowledge into a comprehensive big picture” in a process of “integration” that was also one of “disqualification, constructing the great divide between beliefs and Western science” (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil, Krige and Pestre1997: 79). The former was characterized by perceived carelessness and inaccuracy, the latter by care evidenced through quantification and measurement. European frustrations are in this way telling. Like the stories of many other crops during imperial agricultural expansion, the traces left behind by colonizers in imperial archives expose the active silencing of knowledges. This silencing was itself a part of the colonial enterprise (Chakrabarty Reference Chakrabarty2000), yet the glimpses that remain also reveal how local knowledges refused to be subsumed into colonial epistemological frameworks, and local methods of cultivation refused absorption into colonial notions of proper land management and ownership.

Figure 1. Types of oil palm enclosed in a letter from Calabar to Kew. Economic Botany Archive collection, Kew Gardens 8/1, 115.

Figure 2. Attempt at classifying diverse African terms for Elaeis’s varieties. Report by Mr. Evans, later published in the Kew Bulletin. Economic Botany Archive Collection, Kew Gardens 8/1, 121.

Despite his frustration, in 1909 Prain was still engaged in the matter, which had taken a new inflection, part of a broader scientific turn to genetics prompted by the rediscovery of Mendel’s laws. In an “Agricultural Supplement” to the September 1910 issue of the Bulletin of the Imperial Institute,Footnote 26 the Institute’s Director published a twelve-page report on the different oil palm products of Southern Nigeria. This included the different compositions of samples from their oil palm seeds, organized by their names in Nigerian languages, alongside information about where they were collected, and the measurements of qualities including average length, diameter, thickness of shell, weight, monetary value, saponification value, Iodine value, gravity at 15 degrees centigrade, and acid value. He then emphasizes the importance of understanding whether these qualities will be passed on, coming “true from seed.”Footnote 27 Consequently, while naturalists saw nature as a wealth of species resources, they came to re-evaluate these stores in terms of their genetic value (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil2019). Like other plants, oil palms were now seen not as “unitary wholes, but as ‘materials’ harboring a set of different ‘traits’ that could be isolated and recombined” (ibid.: 3). While observations of plants had been focused on the gestalt of the plant visible to the naked eye, now plants were identified at the miniscule level of genetic difference (Bonneuil Reference Bonneuil, Mueller-Wille and Brandt2016).

This further increased the idea that supposedly careless “native” methods of cataloguing and naming these varieties were of no use, even while colonial experimentations with heredity were embedded in local knowledge.Footnote 28 This simultaneous embedding in, and dismissal of, local knowledge of Elaeis was notably evident in how experimenters repeatedly found that despite their best efforts to isolate genetic traits through breeding, their carefully selected seeds did not “come true.” A report from 1909 documents an experiment undertaken in Cameroon, where Lisombe seeds had been sown and seventeen plants raised, with seven then flowering and fruiting, but only two with the “characteristics of the Lisombe palme.” Despite the “care” taken, “this experiment appear[ed]s to confirm the native reports” that the plant does not come true from seed. The report went on to conclude that further experiments were needed, for which “care” would be central: “care would have to be taken to prevent cross-fertilisation” and “careful records” would have to be kept regarding genetic lineages.Footnote 29 Finally reporting on this research to the British Colonial Office in Downing Street, Prain concluded that the matter could only be “settled by careful experiment”:

It may that the flowers of the palms of one variety receive pollen from those of a distinct variety and that the seeds therefore yield plants of a hybrid character. If experiments could be undertaken to ensure that the flowers of a definite variety be pollinated from the flowers of the same variety and the resultant seeds be carefully collected and sown, the question as to the offspring of the different varieties might be solved. Since it seems clear that certain varieties yield a higher percentage of oil than others I am of opinion that experiments conducted on these lines are likely to be of considerable economic importance for the Palm Oil industry.Footnote 30

Europeans, then, were slow to accept what farmers had long known, that this high-yielding variety was a sterile hybrid, whose oils many considered less flavorful than other varieties (Robins Reference Robins2021: 130–31). Despite this, colonial scientists “hoped to convince Africans to replace existing groves with their own higher-yielding varieties, grown under more “scientific” conditions” (ibid.: 131). To them, what made an experiment scientific was that it was “careful.” This care, they believed, could only be taken by the European. In 1911, Farquhar wrote to Kew to report that the Victoria gardens in Cameroon contained “a few small blocks” of oil palms, of the “Lissombe” variety (as Cameroonians called it). But, he said, it appeared to him “to be a type which possesses characteristics which are far from constant and permanent and which are liable to change with differences of soil, climate, rainfall.” That said, he considered “that by careful cultivation and selection these characteristics could be made more permanent.”Footnote 31

Cultivating Elaeis

So, “traditional” and colonial agriscience were embedded (Osseo-Asare Reference Osseo-Asare2014; Raj Reference Raj2007), yet colonial agriscience and its forms of care were backed by power, which meant European desires came to dominate African landscapes (Ross Reference Ross2017), as the case of oil palm cultivation shows. As traders began seeking to ensure that they had not only an efficient but a reliable source of palm oil, questions came to be asked regarding whether this or that variety of this semi-wild crop, which seemingly flourished on its own in human-altered landscapes, could be cultivated in plantations. But the habits of Elaeis, as well as local methods of cultivating it, once again frustrated European attempts to answer them.

In the Southern Igbo region of southeastern Nigeria, Ngwa people relied heavily on the oil palm. There, the plant grew in semi-wild groves, but did not thrive under shade, and so required an element of human disturbance to get enough sunlight (Martin Reference Martin1988: 22). This characteristic was referred to in the primary reference text for the oil palm, C.W.S Hartley’s The Oil Palm, where he states that it is difficult to tell whether or not palms exist in their groves due to human intervention (Reference Hartley1988: 4). It is a pioneer species, often being the first to colonize previously barren or recently disrupted landscapes and ecological border zones, with a strong “capacity to regenerate” (Maley and Cheptstow-Lusty Reference Maley and Cheptstow-Lusty2001). Because of this ability to proliferate in a semi-wild fashion in the wake of human disturbance, “native” practices of cultivating it mystified colonial officers. The Colonial Secretary and Kew received letters about this from Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Ghana. The colonial office repeatedly requested information on exactly how the palm could be cultivated, often relaying queries from trade companies and commission houses in Liverpool. In a 1908 issue of the Government Gazette from Southern Nigeria, the Conservator of Forests H. N. Thompson detailed his observations of the plant’s habits, and of “the native’s” practices, which drew partly from research conducted by the aforementioned Dawodu (Curator of Lagos Botanic Station):

In the Western Province the systematic planting of Oil Palms is not commonly undertaken by the natives. On newly farmed lands where the palm happens to be scarce and in the forests where they have been destroyed by elephants, seedlings are sometimes transplanted from suitable localities and put down at convenient intervals, where the land is not being farmed, the planted area being occasionally “brushed” over to clear the young palms of dominant growth from the under wood.… On the other hand where oil palms already happen to exist in fair numbers when the land is cleared for farms, seedlings sprout up in immense numbers about a year or two after the clearings are first made, from seeds dropped several years before. These seedlings are frequently thinned out and planted all over the farms, this being usually done in the rainy season. With the above exceptions no particular efforts are made to stimulate the natural regeneration of the species. Very little planting seems to be undertaken by the natives in other parts of Southern Nigeria. The large numbers of Oil Palms met with in well cultivated Districts of the Eastern and Central Provinces are due to spontaneous growth that springs up under the protected mother trees when these areas are cleared for farms. At each successive felling rotation of the Forest growth that springs up on the fallow land, more seedlings sprout up and are in their turn spared from destruction.… The oil palm is generally so plentiful in the moister portions of the Central Province that the natives very rarely take the trouble to cultivate and tend the plant.Footnote 32

Again, the trope of the careless native is evident. If the plant was not being planted or cultivated systematically in gardens or plantations in large numbers, that must indicate an inefficient, careless method, with people not “taking the trouble” to do things properly. The 1909 Cameroon report mentioned earlier made an explicit comparison with the practice in southern Nigeria: “In Southern Nigeria it has been noticed that trees growing on old farms are more prolific than those growing in the dense forest. This is due partly to the greater exposure to sunlight that the palms experience on the farms, and partly to the greater amount of attention they receive in the matter of trimming the leaves, &c., on such areas. There appears to be no doubt that tended trees give a greater yield of nuts than those growing uncared for in the forests.”Footnote 33

Harvesting from semi-wild trees did not fit with the European vision of productivity, and once again this was expressed as a lack of proper care: palms were left growing “uncared for.” Plantations became a marker of plants that were cared for, yet they excluded other kinds of care for oil palms in the process. Following Mann’s earlier reports from Bioko, another from southern Nigeria in 1900 expressed concern that the “natives” were so happy collecting palm oil “owing to the ease with which the collection of oil and nuts provides for the requirements of their lives” that they did “not readily attempt to grow or collect other products.”Footnote 34 If the palm was not cultivated in a manner pleasing to Europeans, it was assumed that the moral benefits of would be limited. This extends much earlier European views on tropical agriculture. Joseph Banks, for example, had an “inability to see labour”: to him the tropics were a superfluity of abundant riches, on which local labor had had little effect (Tobin Reference Tobin2005: 5). Local forms of care were dismissed, yet still made themselves felt, as this extract from Farquhar’s report demonstrates: “It is the belief among some farmers in the Western Province that all nuts from young trees are more or less thin-shelled, and as the tree gets older the shells harden, and very few retain that thinness. It is said that farmers prevent the Arunfo turning into the Pankoro by smearing the wounded fruiting stalk with oil or agidi (maize flour) after the cob has been cut off.”Footnote 35

Where locals did adhere to colonial agricultural techniques, they were praised as the exception to the rule. Proofs for an issue of the journal Forestry West Africa from 1909, sent to Kew by the Governor to the Secretary of State for the Gold Coast, reported,

The Krobos are the only natives who really pay any marked attention to the cultivation of oil palms, and their plantations, which are said to have been planted with oil palms about 40 years ago, are an example of native industry not at all compatible with the reputation which is often attributed to the natives of this Colony. All decayed branches are cleared off, and the heavy share of the palm trees prevents the growth of weeds, so that the plantation presents a very tidy appearance; and it would well repay natives, from other parts of the Colony interested in the palm oil industry, to pay these plantations a visit.Footnote 36

Tidiness, neatness, and orderliness became moral aesthetics viewed as necessary for the proper care of the palm, even though they were later found to be detrimental to palm growth (Robins Reference Robins2021: 118). In turn, “natives” came to be classified along these same lines. A 1908 Arthur William Hill (then Assistant Director at Kew), sent a report to the Undersecretary of State in response to his request for information on the cultivation of oil palm in other colonies, and it refers to plantations being made in Dahomey by only the most “careful natives.”Footnote 37 Care for palms in plantations became a moral skill in which “natives” had to be educated.Footnote 38

One prominent figure shifted the focus on promoting the palm’s cultivation, according to his belief that one could instead carefully cultivate the life of the “native” to ensure that he collected the wild palm’s fruits in a properly efficient manner: Lord Leverhulme, otherwise known as William Lever. While looking for a reliable source of palm oil—or “cheap grease”—to supply his soap factories at Port Sunlight in Liverpool (Nworah Reference Nworah1972), he had turned his attention to what was then the Belgian Congo (latterly the Congo Free State). In the aftermath of King Leopold’s reign of terror (Hochschild Reference Hochschild2012), Leverhulme found in the Congo a pre-existing system of forced labor ripe for his exploitation (Hochschild, introduction to Marchal Reference Marchal and Thom2008: xii). Conversely, he had a squeaky-clean reputation in Britain as a soap magnate who had made that country sanitary, which helped him convince the Belgian government to grant him concessions: “Lever passed in Europe for a philanthropist with enlightened views, on account of the excellent conditions under which the workforce lived and worked at Port Sunlight [near Liverpool]” (Marchal Reference Marchal and Thom2008: 3).

Having been granted concessions, Leverhulme employed coercion to ensure that fruit cutters would bring back enough fruits to him from what had previously been their oil palm groves: “The Africans would have to work ‘his’ palm trees as wage-labourers, on the pittance he chose to pay them” (ibid.: 4). He set up military posts and implemented contracts that forbade cutters to sell fruits to anyone else. If they tried to do so, or kept the fruits that had once been theirs, they risked being charged with theft, and jailed and tortured (ibid.: 56). He moved entire Congolese villages nearer to industrial enterprises to work his concessions (ibid.: 170). Laborers were his “serfs,” just as the palms were now his property. Yet, “In Europe and North America, few did much looking. Most people continued to think of Leopold as the philanthropic king.… This was a pattern that also would be repeated in the later period of the Lever Brothers’ empire … brutal exploitation in the Congo itself, and much talk in Europe about uplift and civilisation” (ibid.: 3). Sales of Leverhulme-made soaps in Africa were seen as proof that the palm oil mission was civilizing (Robins Reference Robins2021: 79).

In an uncanny echo of the early 1900s, in 2021 the European Development Bank-financed company Feronia Plantations et Huileries du Congo was accused of torturing and multiple murders on its plantations in response to the “theft” of small amounts of palm nuts by locals.Footnote 39 That company was founded by Lord Leverhulme in 1911. Today its plantations supply Leverhulme’s global food company Unilever, which is the single largest buyer of palm oil in the world, purchasing 1.5 million megatons each year (Byerlee, Falcon, and Naylor Reference Byerlee, Falcon and Naylor2017: 31).Footnote 40 In response to this brutality, community members have taken over abandoned plantation land to set up a community mill, stating, “With access to these lands, we are able to resume our palm oil production which was violently interrupted with colonisation.”Footnote 41 That today’s violence has a long history is not lost on community members. The moral values underlying it are grounded in an earlier form of “liberal radical rhetoric” that saw “unproductive” (read, non-European) land ownership as “intolerable” (Lewis Reference Lewis2012: 155).

Transplanting Elaeis

Ridley’s prescient statement with which this paper opened is in a report on the African oil palm that he published in a Singapore journal, the Agricultural Bulletin of the Straits and Federated Malay States. It was based on research in west Africa, London, and elsewhere, and he had received initial seeds from Governor of Lagos Walter Egerton.Footnote 42 Such far-reaching intercultural encounters were central to the dynamics of translation that made transplantation possible (Raj Reference Raj2007). Suffusing these were narratives of care. In Hill’s 1908 report to the Undersecretary of State he wrote, “Care would have to be taken that only seed of the best varieties be selected for the purpose of starting plantations” outside of Africa. He cited previous research conducted on the Gold Coast in collaboration with Kew, which found that the best soft-shelled variety was known as “Abobo-be,” a variety also reportedly known in French Dahomey, where he had described the work of the more “careful natives” engaged in cultivation.Footnote 43 Careful classification, breeding, and cultivation, as defined by Europeans, were central to making the oil palm translatable across the colonies.

Initially, the trope of the “myth of the lazy native” (Alatas Reference Alatas1977) was invoked in palm oil’s favor in the region. The Earl of Carnarvon, writing from Labuan, assured Hooker that “the rough unskilled labour … in boiling down the nuts for oil would be well adapted to a people one of whose principal industries is the manufacture of coco-nut oil.”Footnote 44 Sure enough, and again conveniently eliding local labor, four hundred oil palms “sprung up” on a plantation on the “virile” island of Daat. A memorandum later sent to Kew reported that the seedlings had been “carefully fenced from cattle and kept free from weeds and undergrowth,” yet after a few years the palms had “a stunned and starved appearance” as they “were allowed to fall out of cultivation and were abandoned to cattle.”Footnote 45 Eventually the plantation was abandoned (Oil Palm 1889). Perception later shifted: in 1909, Director of Agriculture in Kuala Lumpur J. B. Carruthers wrote to Kew, “I am a little doubtful as to the suitability of [oil palm’s] cultivation for the Native or for the Chinaman. The gathering of the comparatively lengthy process of extraction of the oil and the tiring nature of these processes will not commend themselves to the Malay especially when he can by the easier task of cocanut [sic] cultivation probably get as large a monetary return as by growing the oil nut palm.”Footnote 46 Laborers in Malaysia were not yet considered morally worthy enough to cultivate oil palm.

Although the palm had been in the Dutch East Indies (Java) Buitenzorg gardens (whose name translates from Flemish as “outdoor care”)Footnote 47 since 1850, and subject to a few failed plantation attempts,Footnote 48 it had been little used in the region except as an ornamental plant (Hartley Reference Hartley1988). Again, it often lined avenues and plantations. The botanic gardens in Singapore disseminated for ornamental purposes oil palm seeds that it seems to have received from Buitenzorg (Burkill Reference Burkill1966[1935], 1: 911–12; Ridley Reference Ridley1907).Footnote 49 In 1900, “The most notable use of oil palms in Singapore’s botanic garden was as a host for ferns, orchids, and other epiphytes. Across the region, planters valued the tree solely for its looks…” (Robins Reference Robins2021: 153). This “tall handsome plant, with a wide crown of large, drooping, pinnate leaves” (Henderson Reference Henderson1952: 10), nestled among British garden and parkland aesthetics of rolling hills, symmetry, and formality, which even included a bandstand (Barnard Reference Barnard2016: 31).

From Buitenzorg, and from there via Singapore, seeds had been sent to Sumatra around 1879 (Burkill Reference Burkill1966[1935], 1: 911–12). It was while the offspring of these seeds were growing there almost two decades later that Adrien Hallet, a Belgian agro-economist with experience working among oil palms in the Congo Free State, recognized the uniqueness of the oil palms he saw lining avenues while scouting the possibility of making a profit from the palm in the region (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 17; Berger and Martin Reference Berger, Martin, Kiple and Ornelas2000: 399; Robins Reference Robins2020). He shared his information about these uniquely productive palms with his collaborator and friend, Henri Fauconnier, who took seeds from these original avenue palms (which in turn were bred from the original 1850 population from the Buitenzorg Gardens), to plant his first plantation in Malaysia in 1911–1912 (Giacomin Reference Giacomin2018a: 295). When these came to full bearing in 1917, seedlings were planted in Selangor, on Tennamaram estate, now renowned as the first commercially viable plantation in the region (Hartley Reference Hartley1988: 17).Footnote 50 By 1925, 78,123 acres were planted with oil palm in Sumatra and 19,079 in Malaysia. Despite some complications, on the eve of the Second World War, in 1938, this had expanded to 228,100 acres in Sumatra and 72,143 in Malaysia (ibid.). The house Fauconnier built at Rantau-Pajang, the site of his first plantation, he named “the Palm House,” and the avenue of palms planted there in 1913 still flank the driveway (Fauconnier Reference Fauconnier2003: 182–83).

Part of the oil palm’s eventual success in Malaysia can be attributed to how it was able to take over the existing research infrastructures, unfree labor forces, and mechanisms for colonial land-grabbing that were already in place for rubber (Giacomin Reference Giacomin2018a: 273). Land, even when occupied by forest-reliant peoples, had been considered empty and available for plantations (Harper Reference Harper1997). To work these plantations, colonists drew on their stores of laborers from other colonies, who worked under brutal forced labor conditions (Robins Reference Robins2020; Ramachandran Reference Ramachandran1994; Ramasamy Reference Ramasamy1992; Lees Reference Lees2017). As Robins surmises, “Contrasting the Southeast Asian oil palm story with the African experience makes it clear that the rise of the plantation—whether populated with oil palm or rubber or anything else—was not down to a lucky plant, or scientific know-how or entrepreneurship. The key was power over people and land” (2021: 143). That trajectory would continue, and accelerate, after independence in the twentieth century’s latter half. Recently, “Asian firms, driven by controversy over continued deforestation in Indonesia and attractive terms for land concessions in Africa, are now moving aggressively into Africa” (Byerlee, Falcon, and Naylor Reference Byerlee, Falcon and Naylor2017: 26). For example, in Gabon, Singapore-based palm oil conglomerate OLAM is currently displacing Pépéyo communities.Footnote 51 Plantation corporations have become the new occupiers (Li and Semedi Reference Li and Semedi2021).

Critical Care

Assertions of care in relation to the oil palm—whether care for or about, or techniques of carefulness—must account for how care and colonial assertions of control, improvement, and progress in the name of efficiency and profit have historically co-constituted one another. The story of palm oil exemplifies how acts of scientific care operate within broader intellectual milieu in which bureaucrats and politicians also shape policies. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, scientists were often inseparable from government officials, and one person might fill both roles. They were embroiled in the same government financial infrastructures and moved in the same intellectual and social circles linked through correspondence networks.Footnote 52 Embodied acts of care were assumed to be self-evidently “right”; that is, what one should do in order to improve the world’s knowledge of plants and to improve the plants themselves. This was expressed in the discursive bureaucratic reflections on these processes, and implicated within a political, social, and economic climate in which those forms of care were considered incommensurable with “native” forms of knowing and caring for plants, despite reliance on that knowledge and labor. “Native” ways of caring for plants were branded as care-less, just as their practitioners were branded as inferior to Europeans. The “natives” were subsumed into the same infrastructures of colonial care that their palms had been, whereby what was articulated as care became a mechanism for violent exclusion that was portrayed as a mechanism for inclusion within the infrastructures of colonial care.

Because of the extreme impact that oil palms are having on the world today, they offer a striking example of the genealogies of these processes. Though palm oil is an African crop first cultivated with African knowledge, skill, and labor, today the export value of palm oil from Malaysia and Indonesia “now exceeds the total value of all agricultural exports from sub-Saharan Africa” (Byerlee, Falcon, and Naylor Reference Byerlee, Falcon and Naylor2017: 56). Even since independence, many of the profits of lucrative companies with plantations in Southeast Asia have gone to individual European families (Profundo 2020). One example is the Luxembourg-based holding company Socfin, founded in 1909 by Hallet and Fauconnier. Today, Socfin’s main shareholders are Hubert Fabri (Belgium) and Vincent Bolloré (France) and their families, who are bound together in numerous business partnerships.Footnote 53 Together, Fabri and Bolloré own 93 percent of Socfin’s shares. Socfin controls 400,000 acres of land across ten countries, largely in Africa and Asia, half of which is industrial plantations. The two families took home half the profits that Socfin generated in 2018, an estimated US$60 million.Footnote 54 Today, Socfin is accused of aggressively silencing and criminalizing plaintiffs to prevent their claiming compensation in Sierra Leone.Footnote 55 They are accused of land grabbing and using force to forward their interests in Edo state, Nigeria, among other human rights violations.Footnote 56 In Cameroon, Ivory Coast, and Nigeria, Socfin was granted certification by the palm oil sustainability certification body the “Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil” (RSPO), despite conflicts and charges of intimidation, prompting accusations of greenwashing.Footnote 57

Underlying the massive profits and power of these corporations are genealogies of care that chart a direct path from the palm oil trade at the turn of the twentieth century. Today’s neoliberal corporations frequently mobilize the need for efficiency and the avoidance of wastefulness, citing concerns with world hunger and climate change as their moral underpinnings (Li and Semedi Reference Li and Semedi2021: 2). While evidence as to the efficacy of this model is mixed, technical forms of scientific care are assumed to be self-evidently right: “Their neatly aligned rows of crops and deployment of land and labor on a vast scale are claims to productive efficiency and technical mastery” (ibid.: 2). Through such mechanisms, plantation corporations, like the plantation-building colonizers of old, thus become “occupying forces”: “supposed to bring prosperity and introduce the subject population to new and improved ways of living,” while simultaneously disabling previous forms of life (ibid.: 9). In Bahia, Brazil, this desire for perceived efficiency and modernization takes the form erasing Afro-Brazilian oil palm knowledge and cultivation techniques first developed by enslaved people. Their small-scale, biodiverse, oil palm groves are seen as having little value because they are illegible—rendered inefficient simply because auditors do not document them (Watkins Reference Watkins2021: 216–17)—just as colonial officials once erased African ways of caring for and classifying oil palms even as they co-opted that very knowledge. Such narratives are forms of “imperial debris” (Stoler Reference Stoler2008), which once again rely on the notion that small scale farmers, villagers, or Indigenous peoples are incapable of looking after the land on their own (Li and Semedi Reference Li and Semedi2021: 10).

Disrespect for human life and labor (Li Reference Li2017; Accenture 2012) alongside notions of how oil palm might morally develop a nation, can still be seen everywhere (Li Reference Li2011; see for example Kulim 2011). This prompts “comparative reflection on how contemporary plantation labor regimes are like or unlike those of the colonial era” (Li Reference Li2017: 245). In Malaysia, 90 percent of the oil palm plantation workforce are Indonesian migrants, often immobilized by coercive two-year contracts that forbid their being accompanied by their families or working for other companies, punishable by prison and caning (ibid.: 245–48). Indonesia has an endemic lack of rights for workers. By using contractors, the industry remains free of labor regulation: “Employers are free to buy units of labour power as needed, selecting for the particular (gendered, spatialized, racialized, age-related) capacities required for a particular task,” in a regime “so free it is vicious” (ibid.: 248, 272). Carefully developed, obfuscating audits and measurements permit these practices, with the result that occupying corporations can act with impunity (ibid.: 7). This creates a jarring contrast with extolled values of corporate environmental and social care (palm oil conglomerate Kulim’s 2011 report states, “We care for tomorrow”).

Just as early twentieth-century scientists across west and Central Africa became increasingly concerned with the genetic lineages of their palms, so today’s scientists, most often employed by massive plantation corporations, keep careful records of the pedigrees of their palms by coding them with names that trace back to the original palms from Buitenzorg (Hartley Reference Hartley1988). In Brazil, agro-industrial plantations are often stocked with hybrid germ plasm developed in colonial agronomic laboratories in Ivory Coast or Nigeria (Watkins Reference Watkins2021: 239). Locally bred seeds are seen as inefficient. And again, scientific breeding techniques are couched in terms of care writ large: Elaeis breeders employed by major corporations talk about their work as care for the planet’s future through the continuing development of higher-yielding plants (Chao Reference Chao2018a: 423).

In the light of this, a more critical care is needed, one that can unpack the relationship between techniques of careful control and the ambivalences of moral notions of care. One example is found in Sophie Chao’s ethnography of Indigenous Marind peoples in Indonesia’s encounters with oil palms. She describes how oil palms interfere with Indigenous ways of teaching children to care for the forest through acts of “interspecies practices of restrained care,” as they replace the sago that the Marind rely on for food and cultural sustenance (Reference Chao2021: 258). Oil palms are thus considered “profoundly immoral and invasive plant-person[s]” (Chao Reference Chao2018b: 628), even as people express sadness for these lonely, unloved, and unloving plants. For Marind, the “difficulty of encountering oil palm, combined with the elusiveness of its supply chain and the facelessness of its consumers, are precisely what give rise to its ambivalent ontology” (ibid.: 640). They are “directly mired in the morally fraught predicament of interspecies care” (ibid.: 641). Again centering ambivalence, Wynter (Reference Wynter1971) and McKittrick (Reference McKittrick2013) describe how the slave plots that existed alongside sugar plantations were ambivalent at the same time as they were spaces of resistance: “Secretive histories can be found in the plots … plots of land […] were given to some slaves so that they could grow food to nourish themselves and thus maximize profits,” yet these same “plots of land […] also became the focus of resistance to the overriding system of the plantation economy” (ibid.: 10). In this way, “Alternative worldviews were not sealed off from or simply produced in opposition to the plantation; rather, they were linked to the geographies of the plantation economy and the brutalities of slavery” (ibid.: 12).

Such ambivalences force attention to moments “where the question of ‘how to care?’ is insistent but not easily answerable” (Atkinson-Graham et al. Reference Atkinson-Graham, Kenney, Ladd, Murray and Astra-Jean Simmonds2015). Analyzing these moments through attending to the ambivalences and gaps produced by particular techniques of caring, and the moral values that they produce, can help to illuminate critical care’s flipsides: control, exclusion, and exploitation. Such an approach can celebrate survival and resistance while remaining grounded in an understanding of colonialism’s genealogies and rooted in a “re-reading of imperial history by postcolonial and cultural studies scholars” (Tuhiwai Smith Reference Tuhiwai Smith2012: 150). It can “reframe” Indigenous and local social problems in the light of this history and call for lands to be restored and returned (ibid.: 154, 156) in line with the possibilities of local forms of governance and principles of collectivity and creativity. A critical, or “radical care” can become a “survival strategy,” “push[ing] back against structural disadvantage” (Hobart and Kneese Reference Hobart and Kneese2020: 2). But it will only do so if it forces attention to the histories of, and current predicaments caused by, care’s often duplicitous effects.

Footnotes

Acknowledgments: I am first and foremost grateful to Véra Ehrenstein for many inspirational conversations on the oil palm, and to Kew Gardens archivists Rachael Gardner and Katherine Harrington for their extensive expertise. As always, I extend heartfelt thanks to my UCL colleagues and to my writing group for their advice on an early draft of the paper. I also thank three generous anonymous reviewers, David Akin for his editorial advice, and editors Geneviève Zubrzycki and Paul Christopher Johnson. I am grateful to the Leverhulme Trust—Lord Leverhulme’s philanthropic fund set up in 1925—both for their flexible financial support of this archival research while I was unable to conduct fieldwork during the COVID-19 pandemic, and for prompting my investigation into Lord Leverhulme’s role in the oil palm’s history. Finally, I thank my friends in Malaysia for introducing me to just some of the on-the-ground ambivalences of what it means to work and live with this controversial plant today.

1 The palm oil market was valued at US$65.73 billion in 2015, and was expected to reach US$92.84 billion in 2021. Globenewswire reporting on Zion Market Research, 30 July 2019, https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2019/07/30/1893425/0/en/Global-Report-Palm-Oil-Market-Size-Share-Estimated-To-Touch-the-Value-Of-USD-92-84-Billion-In-2021.html (accessed 10 Mar. 2021).

2 In linking the craft of botanical science with moral value I take inspiration from Jim Endersby’s work on the life of Joseph Hooker (Endersby Reference Endersby2010[2008]). This paper follows similar headings to his book.

3 Similar plant biographies have also been traced by Brockway (Reference Brockway2002), Osseo-Asare (Reference Osseo-Asare2014), and Schiebinger (Reference Schiebinger2004).

4 For example, France, Portugal, the Netherlands, and Germany.

5 This is despite the impossibility of making clear “discovery” claims on plants, particularly in African contexts (Osseo-Assare 2014).

6 Pye and Bhattacharya (Reference Pye and Bhattacharya2012) review these issues, and Colchester (Reference Colchester2011) discusses palm oil and Indigenous peoples in Southeast Asia.

7 Letter from G. S. [George Samuel] Jenman to Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker; from the Botanic Gardens, Golden Spring P.O., Jamaica; 9 Nov. 1876, London’s Kew Gardens (henceforth RBGK) DC 211/612.

8 Indeed, a community organizer interviewed by geographer Case Watkins stressed the importance of foregrounding African agency and resistance in narratives of how the oil palm came to proliferate in Brazil (2021: 96).

9 Exact monetary figures for this trade’s profits in the nineteenth century are difficult to recreate exactly due to an absence of hard data. See Lynn (Reference Lynn1992) for a summary of these issues and some approximate figures.

10 Letter from G.H.K. [George Henry Kendrick] Thwaites to Sir William Jackson Hooker, from Peradenia, Kandy [Peradeniya, Ceylon], 13 Apr. 1850, RBGK DC54/521.

11 Letter from Gustav Mann to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from Clarence, Fernando Po, 29 Dec. 1859, RBGK DC60/199.

12 Letter from Gustav Mann to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from S. S. Rainbow, Mouth of the River Niger, 6 Sept. 1860, RBGK DC60/209.

13 Letter from Gustav Mann to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from Clarence, Fernando Po, 31 May 1860; DC60/203.

14 RBGK ECB/8/1, 5, 6.

15 RBGK ECB/8/1, 9.

16 All statistics in this section come from data in Hartley (Reference Hartley1988: 12), Martin (Reference Martin1988: 28), and Lynn (Reference Lynn1992: 90).

17 The trade in the 1850s had a value of around 1,000,000 GBP per annum, an increase in value that ran ahead of the increase in volume (Lynn Reference Lynn1992: 90).

18 RBGK ECB/8/1, 39.

19 RBGK ECB/8/1, 323.

20 British merchants established this association in 1897 with the aim of removing “unhealthy” competition among themselves and furthering the interests of traders. By 1898, German merchants had been invited to join, indicating a general desire for agreements between Imperial powers that would fix prices and control competition (Olorunfemi Reference Olorunfemi1981: 25).

21 RBGK ECB/8/1, 64.

22 RBGK ECB/8/1, 70.

23 RBGK ECB/8/1, 60–62.

24 Dawodu was rightly dissatisfied with his lower wages. Letter from Henry Millen to Sir Daniel Morris, from the Botanical Station, Lagos, 19 July 1894, RBGK DC184/252.

25 RBGK ECB/8/1, 66.

26 The Institute was set up in Britain to encourage trade and links within British-controlled territories. Its quarterly bulletin contained information relating to the agricultural, mineral, and other industrial resources across the empire.

27 RBGK ECB/8/1, 286–93.

28 For more examples of this increase in attention to genetic characteristics of Elaeis, see the Kew Bulletin (Varieties of the Oil Palm 1909).

29 RBGK ECB/8/1, 199.

30 RBGK ECB/8/1, 185–86.

31 RBGK ECB/8/1, 305.

32 RBGK ECB/8/1, 60.

33 RBGK ECB/8/1, 199.

34 Colonial Reports—Annual, no. 353, Southern Nigeria, Report for 1900, “Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of His Majesty,” Apr. 1902, 13.

35 RBGK ECB/8/1, 317.

36 RBGK ECB/8/1, 121.

37 RBGK ECB/8/1, 98.

38 Yet though plantations proliferate across African countries today, during this period most in West Africa failed. See Martin (Reference Martin1988) and Udo (Reference Udo1965) for histories of the plantation model in Nigeria.

42 Letter from Sir Walter Egerton to Sir William Thiselton-Dyer, from Old Calabar, 7 June 1904, RBGK DC185/195.

43 RBGK ECB/8/1, 98.

44 RBGK ECB/8/1, 3–4.

45 RBGK ECB/8/1, 33, 50.

46 RBGK ECB/8/1, 148–49 (Economic Aspects 1909).

47 Alex Pillen, personal communication, 2021.

48 See Robins (Reference Robins2020) for a detailed discussion of this, and references to further archival sources.

49 Letter from Sir Walter Egerton to Sir William Thiselton-Dyer, from Old Calabar, 7 June 1904, RBGK DC 185/195. See also a note in the Straits Times, 21 Mar. 1863: 1, “Java: From Our Own Correspondent,” which notes “the Government offer the following plants from the celebrated garden at Buitenzorg to anyone who may wish to try the cultivation of them,” listing Elaeis alongside India rubber, cinnamon, manioc, indigo, cloves, and many other plants.

50 See note to this effect in New Straits Times, 19 May 2017, “Celebrating 100 Years of Malaysian Palm Oil,” https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2017/05/240770/celebrating-100-years-malaysian-palm-oil-part-1 (accessed 10 Mar. 2021).

52 See Lynn (Reference Lynn1992: 91) for examples of the link between palm oil traders and politicians, who often funded their political careers with palm oil profits.

References

Accenture. 2012. Modern Slavery in the Palm Oil Industry. At: http://humanityunited.org/pdfs/Modern_Slavery_in_the_Palm_Oil_Industry.pdf (accessed 30 Sept. 2021).Google Scholar
Alatas, S. H. 1977. The Myth of the Lazy Native: A Study of the Image of the Malays, Filipinos and Javanese from the 16th to the 20th Century and Its Function in the Ideology of Colonial Capitalism. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Appadurai, A. 1993. Number in the Colonial Imagination. In Breckenridge, Carol and van der Veer, Peter, eds., Orientalism and the Postcolonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia. South Asia Seminar Series. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 314–39.Google Scholar
Arnold, D. 2014[2006]. The Tropics and the Traveling Gaze: India, Landscape, and Science, 1800–1856. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Atkinson-Graham, M., Kenney, M., Ladd, K., Murray, C. M., and Astra-Jean Simmonds, E.. 2015. Care in Context: Becoming an SIS Researcher. Social Studies of Science 45, 5: 738–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baber, Z. 2016. The Plants of Empire: Botanic Gardens, Colonial Power and Botanical Knowledge. Journal of Contemporary Asia 46, 4: 659–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnard, T. P. 2016. Nature’s Colony: Empire, Nation and Environment in the Singapore Botanic Gardens. Singapore: NUS Press.Google Scholar
Berger, K. G. and Martin, S. M.. 2000. Palm Oil. In Kiple, Kenneth F. and Ornelas, Kriemhild Coneè, eds., The Cambridge World History of Food. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 397411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bewell, Alan. 2017. Natures in Translation: Romanticism and Colonial Natural History. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonneuil, C. 1997. Crafting and Disciplining the Tropics: Plant Science in the French Colonies. In Krige, J. and Pestre, D., eds., Science in the Twentieth Century. Charlotte: Harwood, 7796.Google Scholar
Bonneuil, C. 2016. Pure Lines as Industrial Simulacra: A Cultural History of Genetics from Darwin to Johannsen. In Mueller-Wille, S. and Brandt, C., eds., Heredity Explored: Between Public Domain and Experimental Science, 1850–1930. Cambridge: MIT Press, 213–42.Google Scholar
Bonneuil, C. 2019. Seeing Nature as a ‘Universal Store of Genes’: How Biological Diversity Became ‘Genetic Resources’, 1890–1940. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 75 (June): 114.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brockway, L. H. 2002[1979]. Science and Colonial Expansion: The Role of the British Royal Botanic Gardens. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Burkill, I. H. 1966[1935]. Dictionary of the Economic Products of the Malay Peninsula. 2 vols. Kuala Lumpur: Governments of Malaysia and Singapore.Google Scholar
Byerlee, D., Falcon, W. P., and Naylor, R. L.. 2017. The Tropical Oil Crop Revolution: Food, Feed, Fuel, & Forests. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carney, J. and Rosomoff, R.. 2010. In the Shadow of Slavery: Africa’s Botanical Legacy in the Atlantic World. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Casid, J. H. 2005. Sowing Empire: Landscape and Colonization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, D. 2000. Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference. 2d ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chambers, D. W. and Gillespie, R.. 2000. Locality in the History of Science: Colonial Science, Technoscience, and Indigenous Knowledge. Osiris 15: 221–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chao, S. 2018a. Seed Care in the Palm Oil Sector. Environmental Humanities 10, 2: 421–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chao, S. 2018b. In the Shadow of the Palm: Dispersed Ontologies among Marind, West Papua. Cultural Anthropology 33, 4: 621–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chao, S. 2021. Children of the Palms: Growing Plants and Growing People in a Papuan Plantationocene. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 27, 2: 245–64, https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.13489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colchester, M. 2011. Palm Oil and Indigenous Peoples in South East Asia. Report. Moreton-in-Marsh: Forest Peoples Programme, International Land Coalition.Google Scholar
Cramb, R. A. and McCarthy, J. F., eds. 2018[2016]. The Oil Palm Complex: Smallholders, Agribusiness and the State in Indonesia and Malaysia. Singapore: NUS Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daston, L. 1995. The Moral Economy of Science. Osiris 10 (Jan.): 224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daston, L., ed. 2000. Biographies of Scientific Objects. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Daston, L. 2004. Type Specimens and Scientific Memory. Critical Inquiry 31, 1: 153–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daston, L. 2008. On Scientific Observation. Isis 99, 1: 97110. https://doi.org/10.1086/587535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drayton, R. 2000. Nature’s Government: Science, Imperial Britain, and the ‘Improvement’ of the World. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
The Economic Aspects of the Oil Palm. (Elaeis guineensis, Jacq.). 1909. Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information (Royal Gardens, Kew) 4: 161–84.Google Scholar
Endersby, J. 2010[2008]. Imperial Nature: Joseph Hooker and the Practices of Victorian Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Fauconnier, H. 2003[1931]. The Soul of Malaya. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet.Google Scholar
Giacomin, V. 2018a. The Emergence of an Export Cluster: Traders and Palm Oil in Early Twentieth-Century Southeast Asia. Enterprise & Society 19, 2: 272308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giacomin, V. 2018b. The Transformation of the Global Palm Oil Cluster: Dynamics of Cluster Competition between Africa and Southeast Asia (c.1900–1970). Journal of Global History 13, 3: 374–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gladstone, W. E. 1853. Speech of the Chancellor of the Exchequer on the Financial State and Prospects of the Country: Delivered in the House of Commons on Monday, April 18, 1853, 1–68.Google Scholar
Grove, R. H. 1996. Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Haraway, D. 2015. Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin. Environmental Humanities 6, 1: 159–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harper, T. N. 1997. The Politics of the Forest in Colonial Malaya. Modern Asian Studies 31, 1: 129, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartley, C.W.S. 1988. The Oil Palm. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
Henderson, M. R. 1952. Malayan Garden Plants: Ten Palms. Singapore: Botanic Gardens Singapore.Google Scholar
Hobart, H.J.K. and Kneese, T.. 2020. Radical Care. Social Text 38, 1: 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochschild, A. 2012[1998]. King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa. London: Pan Macmillan.Google Scholar
Hurston, Z. N. 2018. Barracoon: The Story of the Last Slave. Plant, Deborah G., ed. London: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Kaur, A. 2014. Plantation Systems, Labour Regimes and the State in Malaysia, 1900–2012. Journal of Agrarian Change 14, 2: 190213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kulim. 2011. “We Care for Tomorrow, Annual Report.” Johor Bahru: Kulim (Malaysia) Berhad.Google Scholar
Latour, B. 1987. Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Latour, B. 2004. How to Talk about the Body? The Normative Dimension of Science Studies. Body & Society 10, 2–3: 205–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lees, L. H. 2017. Planting Empire, Cultivating Subjects: British Malaya, 1786–1941. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, B. 2012. So Clean: Lord Leverhulme, Soap and Civilisation. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Li, T. M. 2011. Centering Labor in the Land Grab Debate. Journal of Peasant Studies 38, 2: 281–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, T. M. 2017. The Price of Un/Freedom: Indonesia’s Colonial and Contemporary Plantation Labor Regimes. Comparative Studies in Society and History 59, 2: 245–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, T. M. and Semedi, P.. 2021. Plantation Life: Corporate Occupation in Indonesia’s Oil Palm Zone. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Logan, A. L. and D’Andrea, A. C.. 2012. Oil Palm, Arboriculture, and Changing Subsistence Practices during Kintampo Times (3600–3200 BP, Ghana). Quaternary International 249: 6371.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovejoy, P. E. 2011. Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynn, M. 1981. Change and Continuity in the British Palm Oil Trade with West Africa, 1830–55. Journal of African History 22, 3: 331–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynn, M. 1992. The Profitability of the Early Nineteenth-Century Palm Oil Trade. African Economic History 20: 7797, 77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maley, J. and Cheptstow-Lusty, A.. 2001. Elaeis guineensis Jacq. (Oil Palm) Fluctuations in Central Africa during the Late Holocene: Climate or Human Driving Forces for This Pioneering Species? Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 10, 2: 117–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marchal, J. 2008. Lord Leverhulme’s Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo. Thom, Martin, trans. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Martin, A., Myers, N., and Viseu, A.. 2015. The Politics of Care in Technoscience. Social Studies of Science 45, 5: 625–41.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martin, S. M. 1988. Palm Oil and Protest: An Economic History of the Ngwa Region, South-Eastern Nigeria, 1800–1980. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKittrick, K. 2013. Plantation Futures. Small Axe: A Carribean Journal of Criticism 17, 3: 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mignolo, W. D. 2011. The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Moore, D. S., Kosek, J., and Pandian, A.. 2003. Introduction: The Cultural Politics of Race and Nature: Terrains of Power and Practice. In Moore, D. S., Kosek, J., and Pandian, A., eds., Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference. Durham: Duke University Press, 170.Google Scholar
Northrup, D. 1976. The Compatibility of the Slave and Palm Oil Trades in the Bight of Biafra. Journal of African History 17, 3: 353–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nworah, K. D. 1972. The Politics of Lever’s West African Concessions, 1907–1913. International Journal of African Historical Studies 5, 2: 248–64, 248.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oil Palm in Labuan: A Success and a Failure (Elaeis Guineensis). 1889. Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information (Royal Gardens, Kew) 35: 259–67.Google Scholar
Olorunfemi, A. 1981. West Africa and Anglo-German Trade Rivalry 1895–1914. Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 11, 1/2: 2135.Google Scholar
Osseo-Asare, A. D. 2014. Bitter Roots: The Search for Healing Plants in Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Profundo. 2020. Unravelling the Socfin Group. At: https://www.profundo.nl/projecten/unravelling-the-socfin-group (accessed 2 Sept. 2021).Google Scholar
Puig De La Bellacasa, Maria. 2017. Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More than Human Worlds. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Pye, O. and Bhattacharya, J., eds. 2012. The Palm Oil Controversy in Southeast Asia: A Transnational Perspective. Singapore: ISEAS Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raj, K. 2007. Relocating Modern Science: Circulation and the Construction of Knowledge in South Asia and Europe 1650–1900. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramachandran, S. 1994. Indian Plantation Labour in Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur: S. Abdul Maieed & Co.Google Scholar
Ramasamy, P. 1992. Labour Control and Labour Resistance in the Plantations of Colonial Malaya. Journal of Peasant Studies 19, 3–4: 87105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ridley, H. N. 1907. The Oil Palm. Agricultural Bulletin of the Straits and Federated Malay States 6, 1: 3740.Google Scholar
Robins, J. 2018. Oil Boom: Agriculture, Chemistry, and the Rise of Global Plant Fat Industries, ca. 1850–1920. Journal of World History 29, 3: 313–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robins, J. 2020. Shallow Roots: The Early Oil Palm Industry in Southeast Asia, 1848–1940. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 51, 4: 538–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robins, J. 2021. Oil Palm: A Global History. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, C. 2017. Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire: Europe and the Transformation of the Tropical World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schiebinger, Londa. 2004. Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Seemann, B. 1856. Popular History of the Palms and Their Allies: A Familiar Account of Their Structure, Geographical and Geological Distribution, History, Properties, and Uses, and a Complete List of All the Species Introduced into Our Gardens. London: Lovell Reeve.Google Scholar
Stoler, A. L. 2008. Imperial Debris: Reflections on Ruins and Ruination. Cultural Anthropology 23, 2: 191219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoler, A. L. 2010. Along the Archival Grain: Epistemic Anxieties and Colonial Common Sense. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Teltscher, K. 2020. Palace of Palms: Tropical Dreams and the Making of Kew. London: Picador.Google Scholar
Tobin, B. F. 2005. Colonizing Nature: The Tropics in British Arts and Letters, 1760–1820 on JSTOR. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trouillot, M-R. 2015[1995]. Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Tuhiwai Smith, L. 2012. Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. 2d ed. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Udo, R. K. 1965. Sixty Years of Plantation Agriculture in Southern Nigeria: 1902–1962. Economic Geography 41, 4: 356–68, 356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Varieties of the Oil Palm in West Africa. 1909. Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew) 2: 3348.Google Scholar
Verran, H. 2001. Science and an African Logic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Watkins, C. 2011. Dendezeiro: African Oil Palm Agroecologies in Bahia, Brazil, and Implications for Development. Journal of Latin American Geography 10, 1: 933.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins, C. 2015. African Oil Palms, Colonial Socioecological Transformation and the Making of an Afro-Brazilian Landscape in Bahia, Brazil. Environment and History 21, 1: 1342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins, C. 2021. Palm Oil Diaspora: Afro-Brazilian Landscapes and Economies on Bahia’s Dendê Coast. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wynter, Sylvia. 1971. Novel and History, Plot and Plantation. Savacou 5: 95102.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Types of oil palm enclosed in a letter from Calabar to Kew. Economic Botany Archive collection, Kew Gardens 8/1, 115.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Attempt at classifying diverse African terms for Elaeis’s varieties. Report by Mr. Evans, later published in the Kew Bulletin. Economic Botany Archive Collection, Kew Gardens 8/1, 121.