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Holding the wild in the seed: Place,escape and liminality at the Millennium Seed Bank Partnership
Authors:KAY E. LEWIS-JONES
Affiliation:Environmental anthropologist whose research with Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, considers how we might better share the world with wild plants in the Anthropocene. She currently works as an environmental policy adviser and is co-editor of the online magazine TEA: The Ethnobotanical Assembly (https://www.teaassembly.com).
Abstract:The Millennium Seed Bank Partnership (MSBP), which conserves the seeds of wild plants, is the world's largest ex situ plant conservation project. Recourse to ex situ conservation, however, presents something of a paradox for the conservation of plants. Plant ecology often defies delineation into distinct units and is intricately rooted in place. ‘Plant-being’, therefore, has elicited attention within the ‘more-than-human’ turn for its entangled and relational nature. Yet, as the author considers here through reference to her research within the MSBP, in the context of seed conservation, survival for plant species is pursued precisely through escaping place and entanglement. By ‘thinking-with’ seed ecology, she proposes that a dialectic between plant and seed – and thus between entanglement and disentanglement – emerges, suggesting that rather than presenting a paradox, the practice of seed conservation might potentially foster a liminal, generative and experimental space within which new formations of human-plant relationships might be nurtured.
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