The Man Who Made Plants Write: Essays by Jagadish Chandra Bose

£30.00

Available for Pre-order. Due March 2026.

The Man Who Made Plants Write: Essays by Jagadish Chandra Bose Author: Editor: Sumana Roy Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Yale University Press
string(3) "144"
Pages: 144 Language: English ISBN: 9780300278408 Categories: , , , , , ,

An internationally celebrated poet and critic translates Jagadish Chandra Bose’s revolutionary writings on plant sentience and communication Jagadish Chandra Bose (1858–1937) was a Bengali scientist and polymath who developed a theory of plant communication more than a century ago. Bose suggested that plants had their own vocabulary, an “unvoiced life” that he recorded as a “script” with a crescograph, a device that measured how plants respond to each other and their environments. Inviting readers into the “resounding silence of the green plant kingdom,” he described an underlying unity beneath the multiplicity of phenomena, and a world in which “endless music is sung everywhere.” Dismissed as idiosyncratic and unscientific when he was alive, Bose provocatively challenged the hierarchy of living beings, which relegated plants to the bottom, and created a mesmerizing body of work on nonhuman intelligence. Through her lyrical translations from Bose’s essay collection Abyakta (“The Unsaid”; 1922), Sumana Roy reveals the revolutionary character of his mind, as poetic and philosophical as it was scientific.

Weight0.235872 kg
Author

Editor

Photographer
Format

Illustrators
Publisher

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

“J. C. Bose was a true polymath, whose science was propelled by reason and passion. In this wonderful collection of essays—first published in Bengali a hundred years ago—he persuasively represents plants as living beings, bearing witness to their emotional life, their memories of the stimuli they receive and the injuries they suffer. In Sumana Roy’s elegant translation, Bose’s arguments remain fresh, vivid, and compelling to those reading his book in English today.”—Ramachandra Guha, author of Speaking with Nature: The Origins of Indian Environmentalism “Sumana Roy's The Man Who Made Plants Write is a fine introduction to the literary oeuvre of the scientist who pioneered the study of plant sentience.”–Amitav Ghosh, the author of: Wild Fictions: Essays on Literature, Empire and the Environment  “In these pages, we glimpse the possibility of a science with heart and soul—and receive a powerful inspiration to take the Bengali intellectual and cultural world of the turn of the last century with new seriousness.”—Matthew Battles, Harvard University “This collection exposes readers across the globe to the visionary originality and breadth of Bose’s thought.”—Amit Baishya, University of Oklahoma “An exceptionally readable page-turner …”—Jayson Maurice Porter, University of Maryland, College Park

Author Biography

Jagadish Chandra Bose (1858–1937) was a pioneer in radio waves, electromagnetism, and plant science. His books published in English include Response in the Living and Non-Living (1902) and The Nervous Mechanism of Plants (1926). Sumana Roy is the author of How I Became a Tree, Provincials, and Plant Thinkers of Twentieth-Century Bengal, among other books.