Blood Oranges: Colonialism and Agriculture in the South Texas Borderlands

Blood Oranges: Colonialism and Agriculture in the South Texas Borderlands

by Timothy P. Bowman
Blood Oranges: Colonialism and Agriculture in the South Texas Borderlands

Blood Oranges: Colonialism and Agriculture in the South Texas Borderlands

by Timothy P. Bowman

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Overview

Blood Oranges traces the origins and legacy of racial differences between Anglo Americans and ethnic Mexicans (Mexican nationals and Mexican Americans) in the South Texas borderlands in the twentieth century. Author Tim Bowman uncovers a complex web of historical circumstances that caused ethnic Mexicans in the region to rank among the poorest, least educated, and unhealthiest demographic in the country. The key to this development, Bowman finds, was a “modern colonization movement,” a process that had its roots in the Mexican-American war of the nineteenth century but reached its culmination in the twentieth century. South Texas, in Bowman’s words, became an “internal economy just inside of the US-Mexico border.”

Beginning in the twentieth century, Anglo Americans consciously transformed the region from that of a culturally “Mexican” space, with an economy based on cattle, into one dominated by commercial agriculture focused on citrus and winter vegetables. As Anglos gained political and economic control in the region, they also consolidated their power along racial lines with laws and customs not unlike the “Jim Crow” system of southern segregation. Bowman argues that the Mexican labor class was thus transformed into a marginalized racial caste, the legacy of which remained in place even as large-scale agribusiness cemented its hold on the regional economy later in the century.

Blood Oranges stands to be a major contribution to the history of South Texas and borderland studies alike.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781623494155
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Publication date: 05/15/2016
Series: Connecting the Greater West Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

TIMOTHY PAUL BOWMAN is an assistant professor of history at West Texas A&M University. He resides in Amarillo, Texas.

Table of Contents

Foreword Sterling Evans ix

Acknowledgments xi

Note on Terminology xv

Introduction 1

1 Border Colonies: Mexicans, Anglos, and the South Texas Borderlands from Ranchland to Commercial Agriculture 14

2 From Farmers to Colonizers: Boosterism and the Creation of Commercial Farming Colonies 53

3 Making the Border Orange: Citriculture and the Changing Landscape of the South Texas Borderlands during the 1920s 89

4 "More Texan Than the Texans:" Colonialism and Race in the South Texas Borderlands, 1917-1930 108

5 Many Valleys: The Fates of Small Growers and Mexican Workers during the 1930s 129

6 Toward a Homeland: The Chicano Movement and the Intellectual Creation of Homeland in South Texas 164

Conclusion 208

Notes 215

Bibliography 249

Index 263

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