The Bay Shrimpers of Texas
Rural Fishermen in a Global Economy
Robert Lee Maril
320 pages, 10 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0703-7, $35.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0704-4, $17.95
Shrimpers who fish the shallow
coastal waters of Texas fight a constant battle for survival--contending
with shrimpers who fish the deeper gulf waters, competing with
weekend sportsmen, wrangling with government regulations, and
dodging environmentalists' incriminations. Add competition from
the international market, an ominous threat frequently overlooked
by bay fishermen, and the shrimpers; chances of winning--at least
with their current lifestyle intact--are slim.
In The Bay Shrimpers of Texas, Lee Maril explores the
successes and failures of the shrimpers who prowl remote bays,
rivers, and estuaries for their livelihoods. Through random sample
surveys of fishermen, participant observation, and historical
analysis, he examines the political, economic, and social realities
confronting the shrimpers and their families. Legal and environmental
constraints, price instability, work hazards and benefits (only
one percent of the shrimpers surveyed had health insurance),
rivalry with gulf and sport shrimpers, and conflict with Vietnamese
refugees are all factors that affect the outlook for shrimping.
Portraying the shrimpers' lives on land and water, Maril describes
their boats, equipment, and various fishing strategies (both
legal and illegal) used to survive in an increasingly competitive
occupation. He gives an in-depth and personal look at an industry
that in many ways has changed little over the last century and
in others has haphazardly evolved as it enters into a ruthlessly
competitive world marketplace.
The prospects for bay fishing--a vital part of the cultural
identity and tradition of many small coastal towns--are uncertain.
By examining the past and clearing up misperceptions and myths,
Maril provides valuable insight into not just the future survival
or demise of one industry in a global economy, but the future
of small business as a whole.
"Robert Maril is a painter with words, sketching what
he has seen as a participant observer on the Texas coast, aboard
shrimp boats, and at regulatory hearings. In this book the shrimper
emerges as a flesh-and-blood human being trying to support a
family in the face of overwhelming competing economic and political
pressures which he may not fully grasp. Particularly noteworthy
is extensive material on the ethnography of bay shrimping, on
family ties and female shrimpers, on competing Vietnamese refugee
fishermen, and on the influence of special interest groups in
shaping state and federal environmental regulations on shrimping.
The Bay Shrimpers of Texas is a model study in the sociology
of occupations."--James H. Copp, editor of Our
Changing Rural Society
"A superior addition to the literature on commercial
fishing. Maril places bay shrimpers within the larger political
economy of coastal Texas, other gulf states, and even some relevant
portions of the global economy."--David Griffith,
author of Jones's Minimal: Low-Wage Labor in the United States
ROBERT LEE MARIL, associate professor of sociology
at Oklahoma State University, is the author of Living on the
Edge of America, Poorest of Americans, Cannibals
and Condos, and Texas Shrimpers.
|