Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Review of The Nutmeg's Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis by Amitav Ghosh

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Science
Book Club Event = Book List (02/07/2026)


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“We are today even more dependent on botanical matter than we were three hundred years (or five hundred, or even five millennia) ago, and not just for our food.  Most contemporary humans are completely dependent on energy that comes from long-buried carbon – and what are coal, oil, and natural gas except fossilized forms of botanical matter?” – Amitav Ghosh, Chapter 1: A Lamp Falls, Page 28

 

“In other words, English settlers believed that they were less cruel than their Spanish counterparts because instead of military violence, they were using “material forces” and “natural processes” to decimate Indigenous peoples.  This belief is so extraordinary that it requires a moment’s reflection: in effect it simultaneously acknowledges that nonhuman forces are being used as weapons while also asserting that settlers bear no blame for the impacts because they are unfolding in the domain of “Nature,” through “material forces.”  This conjuration neatly effaces the role human actions play in setting environmental changes in motion; it is as if they occur independently of human intentions.” – Amitav Ghosh, Chapter 4: Terraforming, Page 67

 

“In principle there is no reason why reducing any particular terrain to a resource should lead to its depletion, in terms of either meaning or productivity.  It should be possible, after all, to “use” that terrain rationally, matching ends and means.  |  And yet that is not what happens.  It would seem that there is an inherent instability to the framework of world-as-resource that impels it to devour that which it enframes.” – Amitav Ghosh, Chapter 6: Bonds of Earth, Page 82


Review

Is This An Overview?

The distribution of resources is not uniform across political boundaries.  Resources can become a curse, as demand for the resource can provide motivation for conflict.  States with demand for a resource, but do not have the resource in their region, can develop ideologies and methodologies that justify the seizure of the resource from states that do have the resource.  Justifying atrocities against nature and people to obtain the resource.  Whether the resource is a nutmeg or fossil fuels.  As civilization has become more dependent on unsustainable energy sources, the dependence creates demand for military force to be used for control of regions that contain the sources of energy. 

 

Resources can be allocated to match ends and means.  But what usually happens, is that people deplete a resource.  As sustainable resources and practices are competing against those who provide unsustainable resources and practices, those who do provide the unsustainable resources are preventing societies from transitioning toward sustainable resources. 

 

Caveats?

The examples confirm a single assumption, a single bias, that creates misinformation about history, people, and science.  The examples only provide evidence of when humans are destructive toward nature, with a recognition that there no positive interactions between humans and nature.  This sentiment creates apathy toward the future, as it creates an assumption that nothing can done to change the looming destruction.  But there actually is evidence of nature having a resurgence because of humans changing their behavior, with technology and practices that are making society sustainable.  As this book is apathetic towards the future, the book does not provide a guide on how to overcome the problems.

 

There is an assumption, with evidence, that the methods of capitalism cause environmental destruction.  Due to the author socialist bias, there are no references of socialist decisions that have caused human and environmental destruction.  Nor are there refences to capitalists choosing environmentally favorable decisions because of the profit motive.  All people, no matter their political or regional associations, are capable of unfavorable views toward others, and actions against others. 

 

Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What happened to the Banda Island Nutmeg? 
•What was the spice race?
•How dependent on nature are people? 
•By what right can a people be extinguished? 
•How is nature perceived by people? 
•How do property rights affect nature? 
•How can resources be allocated? 
•Who is Gaia?
•Are there positive interactions between people and land?
•How does fossil-fuel industry effect renewable energy?
•Why is the military involved with fossil fuels? 
•How did Covid-19 affect people? 


Book Details
Publisher:               The University of Chicago Press
Edition ISBN:         9780226815466
Pages to read:          255
Publication:             2021
1st Edition:              2021
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          3
Overall          3