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Colin TudgeColin Tudge
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BiographyScience writer Colin Tudge was born on 22 April 1943 in London, and was educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge. He worked as a journalist and was features editor for New Scientist magazine between 1980 and 1984, before joining the BBC where he worked on science programmes for BBC Radio, presenting the regular programme 'Spectrum'. He is a regular contributor to newspapers and magazines including The Independent, The Times, Natural History and the New Statesman. He is a former member of the Council of The Zoological Society of London and since 1995 has been a visiting Research Fellow of the Centre for Philosophy at the London School of Economics.
His most recent book is Consider the Birds: Who They Are and What They Do (2008).
   
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Non-fiction     BibliographyHome Farm: Complete Food Self-Sufficiency (with Michael Allaby) Macmillan, 1977 The Famine Business Faber and Faber, 1977 Future Cook Mitchell Beazley, 1980 Food Crops for the Future: the Development of Plant Resources Basil Blackwell, 1988 Global Ecology Natural History Museum Publications, 1991 Last Animals at the Zoo Hutchinson Radius, 1991 The Engineer in the Garden Cape, 1993 The Day Before Yesterday Cape, 1995 The Food Connection: the BBC Guide to Healthy Eating BBC, 1995 Neanderthals, Bandits and Farmers: How Agriculture Really Began Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1998 In Mendel's Footnotes Cape, 2000 The Second Creation: Dolly and the Age of Biological Control (with Keith Campbell and Ian Wilmut) Headline, 2000 The Variety of Life: A Survey and a Celebration of All The Creatures That Have Ever Lived Oxford University Press, 2000 So Shall We Reap Penguin Group UK, 2003 The Secret Life of Trees Allen Lane, 2005 Feeding People is Easy Pari Publishing, 2007 Consider the Birds: Who They Are and What They Do Allen Lane, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1972 Glaxo/ABSW Science Writer of the Year Award 1984 Glaxo/ABSW Science Writer of the Year Award 1990 Glaxo/ABSW Science Writer of the Year Award 1991 COPUS/Rhone Poulence Science Book of the Year (shortlist) Last Animals at the Zoo 1993 COPUS/Rhone Poulence Science Book of the Year (shortlist) The Engineer in the Garden 1995 B. P. Conservation Book of the Year Award The Day Before Yesterday    
  Critical PerspectiveColin Tudge cut his teeth as a science writer on the New Scientist at a time when the magazine had shifted from being an advocate of scientific gee-whizzery to a fairly severe critic of mainstream science, in the environmental years following the 1972 Stockholm environmental conference. He has specialised in food and agriculture and, widening the scope, biology in general, especially genetics. He is extremely prolific. The Famine Business (1977) was a critique of big agribusiness but it was a reasoned critique rather than a blast of the eco-terrorism we are so familiar with.
'But the general point, which should be written in letters two feet high above the bed of everyone interested in the world's food problems, is that a nation that gets its cereal production straight need have no food problems.'
An opinion Cobbett would not have approved of - refreshing nonetheless - is his high estimate of the potato, which contains pretty well all of the vital nutritional ingredients.
'To be sure its impact has been overshadowed somewhat in recent years by AIDS. But each human being dies only once and malaria does a very good job on its own.'
Tudge is not alarmist about the social and ethical implications of GM technology. Whilst being wary of specific problems that could emerge he says: 'It is surely appropriate to be thrilled by the new genetics.'
'The idea is strange but interesting; the kind of idea that one feels in one's bones is wrong but if correct would be revolutionary.'
On the supposed dangers of high technology he is consistently rational and thoughtful, for example on the idea that computers facilitate the Big Brother state:
'You do not need a computer to run a police state. You just need informers, and an army of disaffected strong men with heads that go straight up at the back.'
Farming runs through his oeuvre. In 1977 he co-authored a self-sufficiency manual with Michael Allaby, Home Farm: Complete Food Self-Sufficiency. One of his most interesting ideas is that the conventional idea of the emergence of agriculture is wrong. The book in which this thesis is elaborated is The Day Before Yesterday (1995), a history of human beings from the beginning. Agriculture is generally supposed to have been the foundation of culture because the surplus it produced enabled large numbers of people to be detached from subsistence and to concentrate on other trades and arts. But all early cultures have a myth of the golden age before agriculture. Hunter-gatherer life was generally easier than agriculture and, contrary to widespread belief, hunter-gatherer societies did develop elaborate cultures. Agriculture meant expulsion from the garden: 'In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground'. For those actually doing the work, agriculture has been a miserable experience for most of recorded history. That surplus in most cases allowed the development of an aristocracy and priesthood who oppressed the agricultural workers. Tudge suggests that hunter-gathering and farming co-existed for a long time - as in the tale of Cain and Abel (and it was the farmer who was the murderer, not thehunter) but that just as computers are wiping out old ways of doing things once farming began its logic was remorseless, even if grim.
Peter Forbes, 2002  
  Author statementI very much enjoy the craft of writing (and it is primarily a craft. Art is a bonus). But also: I like to get my thoughts straight - and writing is the best way to do this. I would like to write more about philosophy, politics and religion, and their relationship to science. So far I haven't done much in these fields but I'm leaning more and more in those directions.  
  Contact information
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