Reinventing Hoodia

Reinventing Hoodia Peoples, Plants, and Patents in South Africa - Feminist Technosciences

Hardback (18 Sep 2017)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Native to the Kalahari Desert, Hoodia gordonii is a succulent plant known by generations of Indigenous San peoples to have a variety of uses: to reduce hunger, increase energy, and ease breastfeeding. In the global North, it is known as a natural appetite suppressant, a former star of the booming diet industry. In Reinventing Hoodia, Laura Foster explores how the plant was reinvented through patent ownership, pharmaceutical research, the self-determination efforts of Indigenous San peoples, contractual benefit sharing, commercial development as an herbal supplement, and bioprospecting legislation.

Using a feminist decolonial technoscience approach, Foster argues that although patent law is inherently racialized, gendered, and Western, it offered opportunities for Indigenous San peoples, South African scientists, and Hoodia growers to make unequal claims for belonging within the shifting politics of South Africa. This radical interdisciplinary and intersectional account of the multiple materialities of Hoodia illuminates the co-constituted connections between law, science, and the marketplace, while demonstrating how these domains value certain forms of knowledge and matter differently.

Book information

ISBN: 9780295742175
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Imprint: University of Washington Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 615.321
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xxii, 209
Weight: 476g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 18mm