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The Transformation of Rural California since the mid 19th Century May 30-June 2, 2013 Workshop at the German Association of American Studies, Erlangen, Germany Conveners: Uwe Spiekermann (GHI Washington) / Britta Waldschmidt-Nelson (GHI Washington) The gold rush transferred modern California within a few decades from a backward and underdeveloped country into one of the most thriving states of the American Union. This was not only the result of mining and oil-drilling but of the development of modern commercialized and market-driven agriculture, which shaped California's landscape since the 1870s. California's moderate Mediterranean climate, its fertile soils, and its immense land resources made it to an ever-evolving cornucopia. The Golden State is the most successful example of capitalist transformation of land use: Coolie work, sub-constructing, irrigation, specialization and mono-cultures, the innovation of new commodities, the use of fertilizers and insecticides, agricultural subsidizing, re-cultivation-all were pioneered in the Western country before it was used in a broader scale in the United States. The panel aims to describe and analyze the transformation of rural California since the 1870s and will try to use this as a tool for understanding the impact that the rise of the modern Western agribusiness had on American society. California early on established a unique model for commercialized agriculture in the American West, which today supplies more than half of the U.S. fruits and vegetables and more than a quarter of its animal products. Although profitable from the beginning, the Western experience marked also the ecological and social costs of a market-driven economy. We welcome papers exploring the following issues from the late 19thcentury to the severe changes during the depression, when dust-bowl migration changed the social and ecological balance of the rural areas again:
Those interested should send a brief abstract and a one-page CV to both workshop chairs Uwe Spiekermann: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or Britta Waldschmidt-Nelson: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . |