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Planters portrayed the Montagnards and their use of fire as an existential threat to plantations, but the Montagnards played a key role in establishing and maintaining plantations by providing necessary labor. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, European planters, experts, and colonial officials valued fire differently, depending on whether it was used to clear land for plantations or for swidden agriculture, reflecting the dichotomy between “indigenous” and “European” agriculture.
Rubber and the Making of Vietnam: An Ecological History, 1897–1975 (Flows, Migrations, and Exchanges)
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