Lawrence has recently published with Andrew Isenberg, "Settler Colonialism and the Environmental History of the North American West," Journal of the West 56, no. 4 (Fall 2018): 57-66.
Lawrence Kessler
Ph.D. CandidateDepartment of HistoryTemple University
Planter’s Paradise: Agriculture, Ecology, and Science in Hawaiʻi’s Sugarcane Plantations, 1778-1920
This dissertation examines the history of Hawaiʻi’s sugar industry in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. It asks how Hawaiʻi’s plantation system connected the islands to global networks of cultural, ecological, and economic exchange as the archipelago transitioned from an independent monarchy to an oligarchic republic and then to a territory of the United States. With research grounded in plantation records, trade publications, and personal correspondence, I argue that sugarcane planters used scientific and technological innovation not only to achieve profitability, but also to establish closer ties to American culture and networks of knowledge. As planters developed a scientifically and technologically sophisticated plantation system, they transformed the Hawaiian environment and turned Hawaiʻi into a hub of a global network of agricultural science. Yet even as the Hawaiian plantation system blurred the distinction between field, factory, and laboratory, planters promoted an image of Hawaiʻi as a naturally fertile Paradise for sugarcane growing.
Updates
He was awarded the 2016 W. Turrentine Jackson article award from the American Historical Association's Pacific Coast Branch for the article "A Plantation upon a Hill; Or, Sugar without Rum: Hawai'i's Missionaries and the Founding of the Sugarcane Plantation System," Pacific Historical Review (May 2015, vol. 84, no. 2). Lawrence was also awarded the 2016 Dr. J. Barnes award for best history dissertation from Temple University.