In this Book

Mining the Borderlands: Industry, Capital, and the Emergence of Engineers in the Southwest Territories, 1855-1910

Book
Sarah E. M. Grossman
2018
buy this book Buy This Book in Print
summary

At the dawn of the twentieth century, the US-Mexico border was home to some of the largest and most technologically advanced industrial copper mines. This despite being geographically, culturally, and financially far-removed from traditional urban centers of power. Mining the Borderlands argues that this was only possible because of the emergence of mining engineers—a distinct technocratic class of professionals who connected capital, labor, and expertise. 

Mining engineers moved easily between remote mining camps and the upscale parlors of east coast investors. Working as labor managers and technical experts, they were involved in the daily negotiations, which brought private US capital to the southwestern border. The success of the massive capital-intensive mining ventures in the region depended on their ability to construct different networks, serving as intermediaries to groups that rarely coincided. 

Grossman argues that this didn’t just lead to bigger and more efficient mines, but served as part of the ongoing project of American territorial and economic expansion. By integrating the history of technical expertise into the history of the transnational mining industry, this in-depth look at borderlands mining explains how American economic hegemony was established in a border region peripheral to the federal governments of both Washington, D.C. and Mexico City.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title, Series Page, Title Page, Copyright

Table of Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-viii

Introduction: Industrial Transnationalism in the Late Nineteenth Century

pp. 3-22

Chapter 1: Early Mining in the Borderlands: The Limits of “Intelligence and Capital”

pp. 23-43

Chapter 2: Instituting Expertise: Mining Education in the United States

pp. 44-66

Chapter 3. Westering Easterners: Class, Masculinity, and Labor

pp. 67-88

Chapter 4: Rhetoric and Risk: The Performance of Objectivity at the Copper Queen Mine

pp. 89-110

Chapter 5: Corporate Capitalism: Engineers and the Birth of Mass Mining

pp. 111-131

Chapter 6: Legibility and the Technocratic Landscape

pp. 132-152

Conclusion: Mediating Resources

pp. 153-158

Bibliography

pp. 159-168

Index

pp. 169-174

About the Author

pp. 175-176
Back To Top