From Mysore to Cambridge and back: The education of a groundnut breeder.

IF 3.7 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Plants People Planet Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-07 DOI:10.1002/ppp3.10450
Tad Brown
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Abstract

Studies that show how empire influenced the development of plant genetics add to the established history of genetics and 20th-century agricultural science. One approach to broadening this history is to consider the contributions of students studying abroad and their greater careers back home. Research agendas differed between and within institutions, much as they do today. This article explores the postgraduate education of an Indian groundnut breeder. It highlights the structural challenges faced by researchers at agricultural departments who sought promotion through education and examines the consequences for plant breeding and for farmers.

Summary: Through the biography of V.K. Badami, this article contributes to debates about genetics and plant breeding in the history of science. Badami, an accomplished breeder in the Mysore Department of Agriculture, took a leave to study genetics at the University of Cambridge. His professors nearly failed him, yet Badami's groundnut breeding experiments proved influential for Indian farmers as well as advances in crop science. This history adds to the thesis that academic genetics varied in support of professional plant breeding by comparing institutional expections between Mysore and Cambridge.The argument is developed by reading Badami's student records along with his groundnut breeding experiments in South India.The study connects the disciplinary history of genetics to plant breeding for the British empire.Badami's experience at Cambridge is indicative of the power relationship between academic genetics and imperial plant breeding in the early 20th century. In this case, his commitments as an Indian agricultural officer conflicted with the discipline's devotion to quantitative analysis.

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从迈索尔到剑桥,再从剑桥回到迈索尔:花生育种者的教育
研究表明,帝国如何影响了植物遗传学的发展,为遗传学和 20 世纪农业科学的既定历史增添了新的内容。拓宽这段历史的方法之一是考虑在国外学习的学生的贡献以及他们在国内的更大事业。研究机构之间和内部的研究议程各不相同,这与今天的情况大同小异。本文探讨了一位印度花生育种家的研究生教育。摘要:本文通过 V.K. Badami 的传记,为科学史中有关遗传学和植物育种的讨论做出了贡献。巴达米是迈索尔农业部一名出色的育种家,他请假前往剑桥大学学习遗传学。他的教授们差点让他失望,然而巴达米的花生育种实验却对印度农民和作物科学的进步产生了影响。该研究将遗传学的学科历史与大英帝国的植物育种联系起来。巴达米在剑桥大学的经历表明了 20 世纪初学术遗传学与帝国植物育种之间的权力关系。在这种情况下,他作为印度农业官员的承诺与该学科对定量分析的投入发生了冲突。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
5.90%
发文量
81
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Plants, People, Planet aims to publish outstanding research across the plant sciences, placing it firmly within the context of its wider relevance to people, society and the planet. We encourage scientists to consider carefully the potential impact of their research on people’s daily lives, on society, and on the world in which we live. We welcome submissions from all areas of plant sciences, from ecosystem studies to molecular genetics, and particularly encourage interdisciplinary studies, for instance within the social and medical sciences and chemistry and engineering.
期刊最新文献
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