Cattle in the Backlands

Cattle in the Backlands

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Henry A. Wallace Award, The Agricultural History Society, 2018Brazil has the second-largest cattle herd in the world and is a major exporter of beef. While ranching in the Amazon—and its destructive environmental consequences—receives attention from both the media and scholars, the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul actually host the most cattle. A significant beef producer in Brazil beginning in the late nineteenth century, the region served as a laboratory for raising cattle in the tropics, where temperate zone ranching practices do not work. Mato Grosso ranchers and cowboys transformed ranching’s relationship with the environment, including the introduction of an exotic cattle breed—the Zebu—that now dominates Latin American tropical ranching.

Cattle in the Backlands presents a comprehensive history of ranching in Mato Grosso. Using extensive primary sources, Robert W. Wilcox explores three key aspects: the economic transformation of a remote frontier region through modern technical inputs; the resulting social changes, especially in labor structures and land tenure; and environmental factors, including the long-term impact of ranching on ecosystems, which, he contends, was not as detrimental as might be assumed. Wilcox demonstrates that ranching practices in Mato Grosso set the parameters for tropical beef production in Brazil and throughout Latin America. As the region was incorporated into national and international economic structures, its ranching industry experienced the entry of foreign investment, the introduction of capitalized processing facilities, and nascent discussions of ecological impacts—developments that later affected many sectors of the Brazilian economy.

Bringing much-needed historical perspective to contemporary debates about the impacts of ranching in the tropics, this book explores how cattle raising transformed a remote region of Brazil economically, socially, and environmentally.
Robert W. Wilcox is an associate professor of history at Northern Kentucky University.

    Selected Timeline for Cattle Ranching in Mato Grosso, 1580s–1980

    Maps

    Preface and Acknowledgments

    Introduction. The Paradox of Tropical Ranching

    Chapter 1. Mirror of the Land: Regional Geography and Environmental Imperatives

    Chapter 2. Establishing Roots: The Ranching Economy to 1914

    Chapter 3. A Boom of Sorts: The Ranching Economy, 1914–1950

    Chapter 4. Land Access: Opportunities and Obstacles

    Chapter 5. Cowboys, Hands, and Native Peoples: Labor Relations

    Chapter 6. The Dynamics of the Mundane: Everyday Ranching

    Chapter 7. National Breeds and Hindu Idols

    Conclusion. Transformation and Continuity

    Notes

    Glossary

    Index

    A welcome, and important, contribution…one of the best studies of the historic development of ranching in the American tropics.
    Wilcox reveals the complex environmental, economic, and social history of one of the country’s most important agricultural industries…Cattle in the Backlands provides a necessary, and previously under explored, history of a regional industry [and] is valuable reading for scholars of agro-industrial development within Brazil and beyond.
    One of the most thoroughly researched histories of cattle ranching in Latin America written to date…this book is a welcome and much-needed addition to existing scholarship on cattle ranching in the Americas and will be of broader interest to agricultural, environmental, and social historians interested in understanding historical relationships between people, animals, and the land.
    A significant achievement…Cattle in the Backlands helps us think more deeply about the importance of animals to peripheral economic development and about conditions in Brazil’s many ‘backlands’ that faced similar struggles against distance, land-tenure insecurity, lack of credit, and physical environment.
    This book fills a large hole in historical scholarship. English-language treatments of ranching history anywhere in Brazil are few and far between. It also makes a strong case for the importance of linking agro-pastoral studies to environmental specificity and to careful consideration of labor practices.
    Ranching is deeply rooted in Latin American societies and cultures, but scholars and the general public often assume that the industry is backward and not a driver of economic transformation. This book undermines that assumption by calling attention to the internal and external forces that made cattle central to regional, national, and international economies

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Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in