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  1. Imperial vernacular: phytonymy, philology and disciplinarity in the Indo-Pacific, 1800–1900.Geoff Bil - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Science 51 (4):635-658.
    This essay examines how Indo-Pacific indigenous plant names went from being viewed as instruments of botanical fieldwork, to being seen primarily as currency in anthropological studies. I trace this attitude to Alexander von Humboldt, who differentiated between indigenous phytonyms with merely local relevance to be used as philological data, and universally applicable Latin plant names. This way of using indigenous plant names underwrote a chauvinistic reading of cultural difference, and was therefore especially attractive to commentators lacking acquaintance with any indigenous (...)
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