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Full Description
The Amazon extends across nine countries, encompasses forty percent of South America, and hosts four European languages and more than three hundred indigenous languages and cultures.Eyes on Amazonia: Transnational Perspectives on the Rubber Boom Frontier is a fascinating exploration how Latin American, European, and US intellectuals imagined and represented the Amazon region during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This multi-faceted study, which draws on a range of literary and non-literary texts and visual sources, examines the complex ways that race, gender, representation, mobility, empire, modernity, and personal identity have indelibly shaped how the region was and is seen. In doing so, the book argues that representations of the Amazon as a backward region in need of the civilizing influence of colonialism and modernization served to legitimize and justify imperial control.
Eyes on Amazoniaoperates in cultural geography, ecocriticism, and visual cultural analysis. The diverse and fascinating documents and images examined in Eyes on Amazonia capture the modernizing project of this region at a crucial juncture in its long history: the early twentieth century rubber boom.
Contents
Introduction: Eyes on Amazonia
1. Gendered Politics of Empire: The Female Explorateur and Visions for the Racial Future of Amazonia
2. Wandering Wildernesses: Race and Masculinity on the Rio Roosevelt
3. A Novice Traveler in a Land Without History: Nationalizing the Brazilian Amazon
4. Learning From the Other: Theodore Koch-GrÜnberg and Richard Evans Schultes
5. The Reconfigured Travel Narrative: Indigenous Representation and El abrazo de la serpiente
Conclusion: Transnational Perspectives on the Rubber Boom Frontier
Bibliography
Notes
Index



