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Cultivating Commerce: Cultures of Botany in Britain and France, 1760-1815

Part of the Science in History series
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Sarah Easterby-Smith rewrites the histories of botany and horticulture from the perspectives of plant merchants who sold botanical specimens in the decades around 1800.

These merchants were not professional botanists, nor were they the social equals of refined amateurs of botany.

Nevertheless, they participated in Enlightenment scholarly networks, acting as intermediaries who communicated information and specimens.

Thanks to their practical expertise, they also became sources of new knowledge in their own right.

Cultivating Commerce argues that these merchants made essential contributions to botanical history, although their relatively humble status means that their contributions have received little sustained attention to date.

Exploring how the expert nurseryman emerged as a new social figure in Britain and France and examining what happened to the elitist, masculine culture of amateur botany when confronted by expanding public participation, Easterby-Smith sheds fresh light on the evolution of transnational Enlightenment networks during the Age of Revolution.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108513735 / 9781108513739
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
30/09/2017
England
English
229 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%