Moore, Deirdre (Author)
Park, Katharine (Advisor)
Kuriyama, Shigehisa (Advisor)
This dissertation explores how a complex relationship between humans, plants and animals led to the production of one of the Iberian Empire’s most valued commodities in the colonial period: cochineal dye. My research involves the history of cochineal dye insects in Europe, Asia and Central America. Based on archival research conducted in English, Spanish and Latin this thesis examines attempts and methods of growing and treating cochineal dye insects from Oaxaca, Mexico to Madras, India. I use global comparisons between native peoples in these areas to study colonial commodities with a particular focus on knowledge systems. Indigenous peoples developed an intricate set of practices, highly dependent on local geography, to ensure the survival of the domesticated cochineal insect (Dactylopius coccus). I consider a complex set of technologies/craft practices employed by indigenous people to grow cochineal in the different micro-climates of the Oaxacan landscape in southern Mexico. Unlike their natural philosophical contemporaries in early modern Europe, native cochineal growers appear to have understood the insect’s generation in detail. This project explains how a domesticated insect with symbolic and religious content was turned into the second most lucrative commodity and industry in colonial Mexico after precious metals. It also examines how knowledge regarding the raising of cochineal insects stayed in hands of native cochineal growers for centuries and did not translate well into other systems. By combining methods in anthropology, history of science, technology studies and environmental history with close text and image analysis, my work re-situates the cochineal in the various worlds views of different historical, global actors from Mexico to India.
...More
Book
Greenfield, Amy Butler;
(2005)
A Perfect Red: Empire, Espionage, and the Quest for the Color of Desire
Article
William Eamon;
(2018)
Corn, Cochineal, and Quina: The “Zilsel Thesis” in a Colonial Iberian Setting
Book
Anja Timmermann;
(2014)
Indigo. Die Analyse eine ökonomischen Wissensbestandes im 18. Jahrhundert
Chapter
Sinha, Arvind;
(2010)
Implantation of Commercial Crops: Cochineal Culture and the Regional Ecology in the Eighteenth Century Coromandel
Book
Alex Hidalgo;
(2019)
Trail of Footprints: A History of Indigenous Maps from Viceregal Mexico
Article
Kumar, Prakash;
(2007)
Plantation Science: Improving Natural Indigo in Colonial India, 1860--1913
Thesis
Cagle, Hubert Glenn, III;
(2011)
Dead Reckonings: Disease and the Natural Sciences in Portuguese Asia and the Atlantic, 1450--1650
Article
Beverly Soloway;
(2016)
“mus co shee”: Indigenous Plant Foods and Horticultural Imperialism in the Canadian Sub-Arctic
Article
Leah Lui-Chivizhe;
Jude Philp;
(2024)
Ways of Knowing a Former Insect
Thesis
Christopher Alexander Gatto;
(2020)
From Cochineal to Coffee: the Making of a New Rural Economy in Miahuatlán, Oaxaca, 1780-1880
Article
Middleton, Karen;
(2012)
Renarrating a Biological Invasion: Historical Memory, Local Communities and Ecologists
Article
Xue Jiang;
Tao Shi;
(2024)
The borderline of science: Western exploration and study of Chinese insect white wax from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century
Book
Matthew James Crawford;
Joseph M. Gabriel;
(2019)
Drugs on the Page: Pharmacopoeias and Healing Knowledge in the Early Modern Atlantic World
Chapter
Few, Martha;
(2013)
Killing Locusts in Colonial Guatemala
Book
Asha Shukla Choubey;
(2022)
Crafts and Craftsmen in Pre-Colonial Eastern India: Technology and Culture
Book
Gabriela Méndez Cota;
(2016)
Disrupting maize: Food, biotechnology, and nationalism in contemporary Mexico
Article
Carlos Viesca Treviño;
Maríablanca Ramos de Viesca;
(2018)
Mexican Medicinal Plants a Therapeutic Resource of Physicians and Traditional Healers
Article
Lopez-Beltran, Carlos;
Deister, Garcia Vivette;
(2013)
Aproximaciones científicas al mestizo mexicano
Article
Adi Estela Lazos Ruíz;
Claudio Garibay Orozco;
(2023)
The Great Chichimeca Landscape: Pre-Hispanic Natural Resources Use
Chapter
Tortorici, Zeb;
Few, Martha;
(2013)
Writing Animal Histories
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