Mr. Dove, RICE-EATING RUBBER AND PEOPLE-EATING GOVERNMENTS - PEASANT VERSUS STATE CRITIQUES OF RUBBER DEVELOPMENT IN COLONIAL BORNEO, Ethnohistory, 43(1), 1996, pp. 33-63
Two remarkable events took place in the 1930s in Borneo: a myth spread
among the tribal societies of the interior, warning them that the int
roduced Para rubber tree was hostile to their swidden rice; and the In
ternational Rubber Regulation Agreement was established, in an attempt
to protect plantation rubber production by restricting smallholder pr
oduction through export duties and other measures. A comparative analy
sis of these two interlinked events makes the tribal dream look less f
antastic and the international regulation look less rational than they
otherwise do. This analysis contributes to current debates about the
peasant tendency to differentiate the production of food crops and cas
h crops, the scholarly failure to link local and global histories, and
the anthropological failure to integrate symbolic and political-econo
mic studies.