Globalizing the Soybean: Fat, Feed, and Sometimes Food, c. 1900–1950

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Globalizing the Soybean asks how the soybean conquered the West and analyzes why and how the crop gained entry into agriculture and industry in regions beyond Asia in the first half of the twentieth century.

Historian Ines Prodöhl describes the soybean’s journey centered on three hubs: Northeast China, as the crop’s main growing area up to the Second World War; Germany, to where most of the beans in the interwar period were shipped; and the United States, which became the leading cultivator of soy worldwide during the 1940s. This book explores the German and U.S. adoption of the soybean being closely tied to global economic and political changes, such as the two world wars and the Great Depression. The attraction of the soybean to stakeholders on both sides of the Atlantic was linked to a need for cheap alternatives to butter and lard and a desire for greater quantities of meat, which led to the soybean becoming a cheap resource for fat and fodder. Only occasionally was it also used as food.

This volume is useful for anyone who is studying or interested in economic history and commodity trading in the twentieth century. It is also connected to the histories of capitalism, globalization, imperialism, and materiality.

Author(s): Ines Prodöhl
Series: Routledge Studies in Modern History
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 203
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of Illustrations
A Note on Measuring Units, Currencies, and Romanization
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Global Commodities
Fertilizer, Fat, Fodder (and Food)
1. Soy around 1900 in a Global Context
Manchuria and Its Beans
Crop Talks in Europe and the United States
2. Commodifying Soy in Europe: Technological Change, Imperialism, and Globalization
Fat: Lubricant of Modernity
Japan and the Global Soybean Trade
Japanese and American Competition in China's Northeast
Soybeans in the First World War
3. Fat and Feed in Germany
Import Dependencies and Technological Innovations in the Weimar Republic
Autarky and Shortages in Nazi Germany
Soya, Manchukuo, and Japanese-German Relations, 1931–1941
Soya in Southeastern Europe
4. Americanizing Soy
The Future Crop and the Department of Agriculture
The Midwestern Dilemma
Agricultural and Industrial Change: New Deal and Chemurgy
“Soybeans Are a War Crop”: Developments in the Second World War
Epilogue: The Tofu Fighter
Index