The Georgia peach : culture, agriculture, and environment in the American South / William Thomas Okie
Material type:
- 9781107417717
- 634.2509 OKI-W
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 630 | General Stack (For lending) | 634.2509 OKI-W (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 37778 |
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633.104 MAD-B Cereal Biotechnology / | 633.2 KRA-H Grasses : crops, competitors, and ornamentals / | 634.0441 LIT-R Biotechnology of fruit and nut crops / | 634.2509 OKI-W The Georgia peach : | 634.772 KOE-D Banana : the fate of the fruit that changed the world / | 634.9 RUN-C Global deforestation / | 634.920954 KHA-I Forest governance and sustainable resource management / |
Imprinted on license plates, plastered on billboards, stamped on the tail side of the state quarter, and inscribed on the state map, the peach is easily Georgia's most visible symbol. Yet Prunus persica itself is surprisingly rare in Georgia, and it has never been central to the southern agricultural economy. Why, then, have southerners - and Georgians in particular - clung to the fruit? The Georgia Peach: Culture, Agriculture, and Environment in the American South shows that the peach emerged as a viable commodity at a moment when the South was desperate for a reputation makeover. This agricultural success made the fruit an enduring cultural icon despite the increasing difficulties of growing it. A delectable contribution to the renaissance in food writing, The Georgia Peach will be of great interest to connoisseurs of food, southern, environmental, rural, and agricultural history.
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