Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas

Founded in 1853, the King Ranch, with 825,000 acres (1289 square miles), remains one of the largest ranches in the United States. Dozens of novels, histories, coffee-table photo essays, memoirs, and animal husbandry texts take the King Ranch as their subject, offering complex and conflicting portrai...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nancy S. Cook
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès 2015-07-01
Series:Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/6936
id doaj-9e75b92b10b74f46891aac3706068911
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9e75b92b10b74f46891aac37060689112020-11-24T22:19:37ZengUniversité Toulouse - Jean JaurèsMiranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone2108-65592015-07-011110.4000/miranda.6936Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of TexasNancy S. CookFounded in 1853, the King Ranch, with 825,000 acres (1289 square miles), remains one of the largest ranches in the United States. Dozens of novels, histories, coffee-table photo essays, memoirs, and animal husbandry texts take the King Ranch as their subject, offering complex and conflicting portraits of this exemplary expression of white power through more than 150 years of U.S. and borderlands history. This essay places the varied discourses about the King Ranch into conversation--the social, economic, representational, and environmental heritages of this ranch kingdom along with the King Ranch's official histories and website. This analysis of the King Ranch and the stories about it reveals the inadequacies of generalizations about such rangeland empires, as it considers the messiness of the intersection of myth, metaphor, and actual land use. By bringing the tools of cultural geography, environmental, literary, and cultural studies together, along with methods usually outside the purview of the field, such as ranch management and range science, all under the rubric of "Place Studies," the essay shows what an alternative direction in American Studies might look like.http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/6936AgribusinessKineñoKing RanchmythmakingPlace Studiesranching
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy S. Cook
spellingShingle Nancy S. Cook
Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
Agribusiness
Kineño
King Ranch
mythmaking
Place Studies
ranching
author_facet Nancy S. Cook
author_sort Nancy S. Cook
title Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
title_short Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
title_full Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
title_fullStr Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
title_full_unstemmed Preserving Home and Revising History: Legacies of the King Ranch of Texas
title_sort preserving home and revising history: legacies of the king ranch of texas
publisher Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès
series Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
issn 2108-6559
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Founded in 1853, the King Ranch, with 825,000 acres (1289 square miles), remains one of the largest ranches in the United States. Dozens of novels, histories, coffee-table photo essays, memoirs, and animal husbandry texts take the King Ranch as their subject, offering complex and conflicting portraits of this exemplary expression of white power through more than 150 years of U.S. and borderlands history. This essay places the varied discourses about the King Ranch into conversation--the social, economic, representational, and environmental heritages of this ranch kingdom along with the King Ranch's official histories and website. This analysis of the King Ranch and the stories about it reveals the inadequacies of generalizations about such rangeland empires, as it considers the messiness of the intersection of myth, metaphor, and actual land use. By bringing the tools of cultural geography, environmental, literary, and cultural studies together, along with methods usually outside the purview of the field, such as ranch management and range science, all under the rubric of "Place Studies," the essay shows what an alternative direction in American Studies might look like.
topic Agribusiness
Kineño
King Ranch
mythmaking
Place Studies
ranching
url http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/6936
work_keys_str_mv AT nancyscook preservinghomeandrevisinghistorylegaciesofthekingranchoftexas
_version_ 1725778298006405120