Date of Award
2023-08-01
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy
Department
History
Advisor(s)
Samuel Brunk
Second Advisor
Yolanda Chávez-Leyva
Abstract
This project examines the historical, environmental, and cultural trajectory of a common desert shrub, called the creosote bush/Larrea tridentata, revealing distinct and often contradictory ways in which the North American arid deserts have been experienced, shaped, and perceived. It examines the plant's connection to the production of environmental knowledge within changing Indigenous, colonial, and 20th century epistemologies and value systems in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands region over the long-term. Utilizing diverse historical and ethnographic sources as well as innovative oral history methods, this study reveals the connection between the olfactory sense and human attachments to place. Although major resource plants often receive the attention of large-scale historical studies, by shifting the focus to the creosote bush, this work argues that this non-commodified so-called â??wildâ?? plant has co-created place through its cultural and eco-sensorial relationships with the people of the U.S-Mexico desert borderlands.
Language
en
Provenance
Recieved from ProQuest
Copyright Date
2023-08
File Size
203 p.
File Format
application/pdf
Rights Holder
Ligia A. Arguilez
Recommended Citation
Arguilez, Ligia A., "Making The Desert Place: An Environmental & Cultural History Of The Creosote Bush From The U.s.-Mexico Borderlands" (2023). Open Access Theses & Dissertations. 3894.
https://scholarworks.utep.edu/open_etd/3894