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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2010) 84 (2): 272–273.
Published: 01 April 2010
...Angela Firkus Purebred and Homegrown: America’s County Fairs . Drake Hokanson and Carol Kratz . © 2010 Agricultural History Society 2010 AgriculturHalistory Spring ofAmericanagricultureT.hese analysesare not overlycomplex- readers withan understandinogf basic economicsand...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2010) 84 (2): 271–272.
Published: 01 April 2010
.... "Flashingl,oud,familiarbutexotic,deep-friedm, anure-scentebdo, thtrashy andclean-cutinturnd, usty(unlessitrains),fly-infest(eadlwaysflies),sometimespastoraland grotesqueat the same time,spinningc,owboy-booted, hard-sells,oft-servpe,urebredand homegrown("7). Ifthisdescriptiondoes...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (2): 249–250.
Published: 01 April 2013
... through and write about New Zealand as a case study for abstract global hypotheses such as ecological imperialism, this team has a homegrown hypothesis. It is framed by observing carefully the historical transformation of their own place from a landscape with little grass, to a place so predominated...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (1): 114–116.
Published: 01 January 2005
... discourse that filtered down from radical intellectuals, polemicists, and protesters, however, with any potential class consciousness fragmented across farms and villages, their protest was neither revolutionary nor anti-capitalist but rather it was essentially reactive, apolitical, and homegrown...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (1): 105–107.
Published: 01 January 2005
... the region out of poverty than a simple count of spindles and weavers would suggest. The homegrown tobacco industry provides a contrasting story. Tobacco manufacturers were highly in? novative marketers and manufacturers, and profits from tobacco were plowed back into the construction of a modern electric...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (1): 107–109.
Published: 01 January 2005
... in the north. The South's largest indus? try did less to transform its economy and lift the region out of poverty than a simple count of spindles and weavers would suggest. The homegrown tobacco industry provides a contrasting story. Tobacco manufacturers were highly in? novative marketers and manufacturers...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2004) 78 (4): 417–437.
Published: 01 October 2004
... kerosene, coffee, and cloth. So while some mountaineers did without most store-bought items, substituting homegrown corn flour for wheat flour, or honey and sorghum for sugar, virtually no one was completely separated from the market exchanges that brought consumer goods into the moun? tains. Even...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (1): 93–114.
Published: 01 January 2013
..., Russell s work was a model for what he hoped the Progressive Farmer could become from the practical farming advice to the printing of homegrown poetry and prose. Poe recalled in his autobiography that the Homestead was the most scholarly publication ever printed for farm people and claimed in a 1914...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (3): 386–412.
Published: 01 July 2020
... use among Chinese farmers in the late nineteenth century was perhaps as much a testament to the characteristics of the technology as it was to the particular social and economic conditions in China. Even in countries with homegrown machine industries, such as Britain and the United States...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (4): 511–544.
Published: 01 October 2016
...-off metropole, they practiced colonialism in relationship to their nearby metropoles of Philadelphia, new york, and boston. This homegrown colonialism allowed the nation to retain locally more of the profits from their resource extractions. The remaining british subjects north of the border stayed...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (1): 108–140.
Published: 01 January 2020
... the same processes of Latin American state formation that led to the opening of agricultural experiment stations in Brazil, Colombia, and the Caribbean (and Chardón s transnational work as a consultant therein). The intellectual ascendance of racial democracy theories and the homegrown founding...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (1): 24–60.
Published: 01 January 2020
... they were the very best. Since the articles were identical, they probably came from Dangler (which advertised in the journals), although they appeared to be homegrown.31 Indeed, the article concluded that the advertising explained how the journal could offer stoves at such favorable rates. Nevertheless...