Litcius/Paper detail

Teawords: Experiments with Quality in Indian Tea Production

Sarah Besky

2020American Anthropologist15 citationsDOI

Abstract

ABSTRACT The identification of distinguishing characteristics of commodities—a process known as “qualification”—frequently involves the use of specialized lexicons. Before Indian teas are auctioned, brokers evaluate them using a glossary of some one hundred and fifty English words. This glossary was devised at the end of the British colonial period by industrial chemists who aimed to subject the aesthetic judgments of brokers to experimental scrutiny. “Teawords” formed part of a late colonial effort to ensure the circulation of “quality” tea from plantation to market. After India's independence, Indian brokers and plantation managers continued this effort. Like other vocabularies for describing comestible commodities, teawords performatively reproduce gendered and classed distinctions, but they do much more. When they circulate among brokers and managers, teawords subject plantation conditions to experimental adjustment. As a form of linguistic and material experimentation, qualification extends colonial norms of valuation—and the institution of the plantation itself—into contemporary capitalist circuits. [ capitalism, food, taste, value, India ]

Topics & Concepts

ScrutinyGlossaryColonialismCapitalismValuation (finance)Quality (philosophy)Production (economics)Subject (documents)TasteSociologyHistoryBusinessEconomicsLawPolitical scienceAccountingLinguisticsPhilosophyComputer sciencePsychologyEpistemologyLibrary scienceMacroeconomicsNeurosciencePoliticsCulinary Culture and TourismHistorical Studies and Socio-cultural AnalysisGlobal trade, sustainability, and social impact
Teawords: Experiments with Quality in Indian Tea Production | Litcius