Book summaryPablo Neruda's famous protest poem, "The United Fruit Co.," begins: "When the trumpet sounded/all was prepared on the earth/and Jehovah parceled out the world/to Coca-Cola Inc., Anaconda/Ford Motors, and other entities:/the United Fruit Company Inc./reserved for itself the juiciest bit/the central coast of my land/the gentle waist of America." The fruit in question is the banana, and it may be hard to believe now, with oil and technology companies ruling the corporate world, just how powerful the influence of the banana has been, not just in South America, but around the world. Dan Koppel traces the history of this ubiquitous fruit, from its humble origins to its ascension as the most eaten fruit on the planet. |
Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the Worldby Koeppel, Dan
Book desription: New York, NY: Hudson Street Press, 2008 The world's most humble fruit has caused inordinate damage to nature and man, and Popular Science journalist Koeppel (To See Every Bird on Earth) embarks on an intelligent, chock-a-block sifting through the havoc. Seedless, sexless bananas evolved from a wild inedible fruit first cultivated in Southeast Asia, and was probably the apple that got Adam and Eve in trouble in the Garden of Eden. From there the fruit traveled to Africa and across the Pacific, arriving on U.S. shores probably with the Europeans in the 15th century. However, the history of the banana turned sinister as American businessmen caught on to the marketability of this popular, highly perishable fruit then grown in Jamaica. Thanks to the building of the railroad through Costa Rica by the turn of the century, the United Fruit company flourished in Central America, its tentacles extending into all facets of government and industry, toppling banana republics and igniting labor wars. Meanwhile, the Gros Michel variety was annihilated by a fungus called Panama disease (Sigatoka), which today threatens the favored Cavendish, as Koeppel sounds the alarm, shuttling to genetics-engineering labs from Honduras to Belgium. His sage, informative study poses the question fairly whether it's time for consumers to reverse a century of strife and exploitation epitomized by the purchase of one banana.. Hard Cover. New/New.
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