Succeeding from nature: The non‐human agency of Portuguese cork
Non‐human life has economic agency. It acts on the cultural values of products. Naturalness is an important, yet ambiguous, property in the market and imbues vibrant materials with organic, healthy, traditional, and other contingent properties. However, “natural” products can be succeeded in form an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Geographical journal 2020-06, Vol.186 (2), p.237-246 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Non‐human life has economic agency. It acts on the cultural values of products. Naturalness is an important, yet ambiguous, property in the market and imbues vibrant materials with organic, healthy, traditional, and other contingent properties. However, “natural” products can be succeeded in form and function by “synthetic” alternatives. Their value is further affected by non‐humans. Our signal case explores Portuguese cork bark, an agroforestry product grown in the montado, a biodiverse managed mosaic landscape of forestry and farming. The natural value of cork bottle stoppers is associated with their effect on wine flavour. Oxygen‐permeable cork enables beneficial ageing to enhance flavour, whereas cork contaminated with taint degrades wine. Synthetic stoppers recreate the form and function of corks without being a vector for contamination. A succession from natural cork stoppers to reliable artificial polyethylene corks led to a decline in demand for cork bark and negative impacts on montado biodiversity. Yet here we demonstrate that such successions can be reversed as the affective properties of cork bark products became revalued with improvements in manufacturing, increasing concern for environmental sustainability, and rising consumer demand for natural products. This leads us to explore further the dynamics between natural goods and synthetic replacements. We argue that rather than being two discrete domains of reality, natural and artificial products are both co‐produced through assemblages of human and non‐human action. Understanding succession between “natural” and “artificial” products enables new insights into the geographies of non‐human agency.
Non‐humans have cultural and economic agency and can influence changing markets for “natural” and “artificial” products. In this article we take an original approach to the geographies of nature by exploring how cork‐bark wine stoppers were succeeded by artificial wine stoppers that have the same form and function, yet there was a subsequent resurgence in cork agroforestry. The dynamics between consumption, production and biodiversity shape the landscapes of Portugal's Montado. |
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ISSN: | 0016-7398 1475-4959 |
DOI: | 10.1111/geoj.12335 |