Fruit, Fiber, and Fire: A History of Modern Agriculture in New Mexico

Fruit, Fiber, and Fire: A History of Modern Agriculture in New Mexico

by William R. Carleton
Fruit, Fiber, and Fire: A History of Modern Agriculture in New Mexico

Fruit, Fiber, and Fire: A History of Modern Agriculture in New Mexico

by William R. Carleton

Hardcover

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Overview

Fray Francisco Atanasio Domínguez Award from the Historical Society of New Mexico

For much of the twentieth century, modernization did not simply radiate from cities into the hinterlands; rather, the broad project of modernity, and resistance to it, has often originated in farm fields, at agricultural festivals, and in agrarian stories. In New Mexico no crops have defined the people and their landscape in the industrial era more than apples, cotton, and chiles.

In Fruit, Fiber, and Fire William R. Carleton explores the industrialization of apples, cotton, and chiles to show how agriculture has affected the culture of twentieth-century New Mexico. The physical origins, the shifting cultural meanings, and the environmental and market requirements of these three iconic plants all broadly point to the convergence in New Mexico of larger regions—the Mexican North, the American Northeast, and the American South—and the convergence of diverse regional attitudes toward industry in agriculture.

Through the local stories that represent lives filled with meaningful struggles, lessons, and successes, along with the systems of knowledge in our recent agricultural past, Carleton provides a history of the broader culture of farmers and farmworkers. In the process, seemingly mere marginalia—a farmworker’s meal, a small orchard’s advertisement campaign, or a long-gone chile seed—add up to an agricultural past with diverse cultural influences, many possible futures, and competing visions of how to feed and clothe ourselves that remain relevant as we continue to reimagine the crops of our future.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496216168
Publisher: Nebraska
Publication date: 06/01/2021
Pages: 228
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

William R. Carleton is the editor of Edible New Mexico and lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
 

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Part 1. Apples
1. Before There Were Aliens, There Were Apples: Myths, Moths, and Modernity in New Mexico’s Early Commercial Orchards
2. Patent Lies and the “People’s Business”: The Modern Core of Northern New Mexico Agriculture, 1940–80
Part 2. Cotton
3. The Shifting Subjects of a Southwest King: Cotton, Agricultural Industrialization, and Migrations in the Interwar New Mexico Borderlands
4. Diversification, Paternalism, and the Transnational Threads of Cotton in Southern New Mexico: The Industrial Ideal at Work at Stahmann Farms, 1926–70
Part 3. Chile
5. Crossing Chiles, Crossing Borders: Dr. Fabián García, the New Mexican Chile Pepper, and Modernity in the Early Twentieth-Century U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
6. The Evolution of a Modern Pod: The Industrial Chile and Its Storytellers in New Mexico
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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