Donald Worster's Rivers of Empire: Water, Aridity, and the Growth of the American West is a history of the development of the American West through the lens of water management technology. Building on substantial archival research, Worster argues that
The West, more than any other American region,
was built by state power, state expertise, state technology, and state
bureaucracy. That is another way of
saying that it has been, and is, the most thoroughly modern of American
regions, and therefore that its experience, particularly in the matter of
water, has been most instructive for deciphering the confused messages of that
modernity.
By positioning water as technology rather than nature and the West as a federally-funded, man-made landscape, Worster both deconstructs the West's self-image as independent and free of government control AND reconstructs the region not as a colony of the East but as the seat of a global American empire.