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Aniket Aga


Curriculum vitae


Department of Geography

SUNY Buffalo

105 Wilkeson Quad
Buffalo NY 14261
USA





Department of Geography

SUNY Buffalo

105 Wilkeson Quad
Buffalo NY 14261
USA



The marketing of corporate agrichemicals in Western India: theorizing graded informality


Journal article


Aniket Aga
Journal of Peasant Studies, 2019

DOI Winner of the 2019-20 Bharadwaj-Wolf Prize
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Aga, A. (2019). The marketing of corporate agrichemicals in Western India: theorizing graded informality. Journal of Peasant Studies.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Aga, Aniket. “The Marketing of Corporate Agrichemicals in Western India: Theorizing Graded Informality.” Journal of Peasant Studies (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Aga, Aniket. “The Marketing of Corporate Agrichemicals in Western India: Theorizing Graded Informality.” Journal of Peasant Studies, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{aniket2019a,
  title = {The marketing of corporate agrichemicals in Western India: theorizing graded informality},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Journal of Peasant Studies},
  author = {Aga, Aniket}
}

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article focuses on the young men from agrarian backgrounds who work as field marketing agents for companies like Monsanto in western Maharashtra, India. They promote pesticides, herbicides and other agrichemicals to farmers who often belong to higher castes. My ethnography suggests that the promotion of agrichemicals deploys the idiom of agricultural extension, upsetting India's tenacious social hierarchies on the one hand, and driving corporate profits and indebtedness among farmers on the other. With respect to the subordination of agriculture to industrial capital, I contend that farmers and marketing agents can neither be arrayed against one another, nor is their relation to industrial capital alike. Agrichemicals marketing troubles dichotomous frameworks, such as farmers against industrial capital. Ultimately, I call for re-conceiving political economy in terms of graded informality, where opportunities and constraints for accumulation map onto a gradient, rather than fall on opposite ends of a binary.


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