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A01=Emily Celeste Vazquez Enriquez
Anthropocene
Author_Emily Celeste Vazquez Enriquez
biomes
border ecologies
border militarization
border security
border violence
borderlands
Borders
Category=DSB
Category=JPN
climate change
climate migration
colonialism
cultural landscapes
desertification
dispossession
ecological justice
ecological migration
economic exploitation
ecopolitics
ecosystems
environment
environmental activism
environmental degradation
environmental displacement
environmental harm
environmental racism
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
geo-politics
global ecology
global warming
immigration policy
Indigenous knowledge
Indigenous land
land exploitation
land sovereignty
Latinx studies
Mexican studies
migrant rights
migration
Native and Indigenous studies
natural resources
non-human migration
resource extraction
rivers
settler colonialism
social movements
sovereignty
territoriality
transnational conflict
transnationalism
U.S.-Mexico border
water management
water rights
water scarcity

Product details

  • ISBN 9780826508270
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book is freely available in an open-access edition thanks to the generous support by the University of California Davis Library.

What effect do heavily fortified national borders have on the natural environments that surround them? In Border Biomes, Emily Celeste Vázquez Enríquez explores this question by analyzing contemporary Mexican, Latinx, and Indigenous literature that has tried to highlight the human and ecological toll of Mexico’s borders with the United States and Guatemala. By challenging the very premise of borders as permanent, immovable boundaries, she shows how novelists and poets in Mexico and the United States have tried to represent and understand the vast social, political, and ecological harm caused by these constructions. She argues that the environmental destruction that borders create is inseparable from state‑sanctioned, anti‑immigrant racial violence. To do this, she structures the book around three main biomes: rivers, deserts, and forests. Within each chapter, Vázquez Enríquez considers how authors such as Dolores Dorantes, Natalie Diaz, and Ofelia Zepeda have drawn upon alternative Indigenous epistemologies and forms of representation to register the sweeping damage of bordering regimes on the Colorado River, the Southwest Desert, and the Selva El Petén, and other biomes. By critically analyzing the work of these US and Mexican writers, she contests traditional interpretations of Mexican literature as nationally bounded and instead proposes an expansive view of “Mexican literature.” More fundamentally, Border Biomes suggests literature's potential to create new ecological realities and challenge the naturalization of borders and the ecological violence that they provoke.

Emily Celeste Vázquez Enríquez is an assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of California Davis.

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