The Latin American Ecocultural Reader
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The Latin American Eco cultural Reader
Author | : Gisela Heffes,Jennifer French |
Publsiher | : Unknown |
Total Pages | : 288 |
Release | : 2020-11-15 |
Genre | : Latin America |
ISBN | : 0810142635 |
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The Latin American Eco-Cultural Reader is an anthology of literary and cultural texts about the natural world, spanning the early colonial period to the present.
The Latin American Ecocultural Reader
Author | : Jennifer French,Gisela Heffes |
Publsiher | : Northwestern University Press |
Total Pages | : 602 |
Release | : 2020-11-15 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 9780810142657 |
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The Latin American Ecocultural Reader is a comprehensive anthology of literary and cultural texts about the natural world. The selections, drawn from throughout the Spanish-speaking countries and Brazil, span from the early colonial period to the present. Editors Jennifer French and Gisela Heffes present work by canonical figures, including José Martí, Bartolomé de las Casas, Rubén Darío, and Alfonsina Storni, in the context of our current state of environmental crisis, prompting new interpretations of their celebrated writings. They also present contemporary work that illuminates the marginalized environmental cultures of women, indigenous, and Afro-Latin American populations. Each selection is introduced with a short essay on the author and the salience of their work; the selections are arranged into eight parts, each of which begins with an introductory essay that speaks to the political, economic, and environmental history of the time and provides interpretative cues for the selections that follow. The editors also include a general introduction with a concise overview of the field of ecocriticism as it has developed since the 1990s. They argue that various strands of environmental thought—recognizable today as extractivism, eco-feminism, Amerindian ontologies, and so forth—can be traced back through the centuries to the earliest colonial period, when Europeans first described the Americas as an edenic “New World” and appropriated the bodies of enslaved Indians and Africans to exploit its natural bounty.
Handbook of Latin American Environmental Aesthetics
Author | : Jens Andermann,Gabriel Giorgi,Victoria Saramago |
Publsiher | : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Total Pages | : 506 |
Release | : 2023-09-04 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9783110775907 |
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The Handbook of Latin American Environmental Aesthetics offers a comprehensive overview of Latin American aesthetic and conceptual production addressing the more-than-human environment at the intersection between art, activism, and critique. Fields include literature, performance, film, and other audiovisual media as well as their interactions with community activisms. Scholars who have helped establish environmental approaches in the field as well as emergent critical voices revisit key concepts such as ecocriticism, (post-)extractivism, and multinaturalism, while opening new avenues of dialogue with areas including critical race theory and ethnicity, energy humanities, queer-*trans studies, and infrastructure studies, among others. This volume both traces these genealogies and maps out key positions in this increasingly central field of Latin Americanism, at the same time as they relate it to the environmental humanities at large. By showing how artistic and literary productions illuminate critical zones of environmental thought, articulating urgent social and material issues with cultural archives, historical approaches and conceptual interventions, this volume offers cutting-edge critical tools for approaching literature and the arts from new angles that call into question the nature/culture boundary.
Reading and Writing the Latin American Landscape
Author | : B. Rivera-Barnes,J. Hoeg |
Publsiher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 203 |
Release | : 2009-12-07 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9780230101906 |
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Spanning the whole of Latin America, including Brazil, from its beginnings in 1492 up to the present time, Rivera-Barnes and Hoeg analyze the relationship between literature and the environment in both literary and testimonial texts, asking questions that contribute to the on-going dialogue between the arts and the sciences.
The Latin American Cultural Studies Reader
Author | : Ana del Sarto,Alicia Ríos,Abril Trigo |
Publsiher | : Duke University Press |
Total Pages | : 834 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0822333406 |
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Essays by intellectuals and specialists in Latin American cultural studies that provide a comprehensive view of the specific problems, topics, and methodologies of the field vis-a-vis British and U.S. cultural studies.
The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Twenty First Century Latin American Literary and Cultural Forms
Author | : Guillermina De Ferrari,Mariano Siskind |
Publsiher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 694 |
Release | : 2022-08-19 |
Genre | : Foreign Language Study |
ISBN | : 9780429602672 |
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The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Latin American Literary and Cultural Forms brings together a team of expert contributors in this critical and innovative volume. Highlighting key trends within the discipline, as well as cutting-edge viewpoints that revise and redefine traditional debates and approaches, readers will come away with an understanding of the complexity of twenty-first-century Latin American cultural production and with a renovated and eminently contemporary understanding of twentieth-century literature and culture. This invaluable resource will be of interest to advanced students and academics in the fields of Latin American literature, cultural studies, and comparative literature.
Visualizing Loss in Latin America
Author | : Gisela Heffes |
Publsiher | : Springer Nature |
Total Pages | : 284 |
Release | : 2023-05-19 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9783031288319 |
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Visualizing Loss in Latin America engages with a varied corpus of textual, visual, and cultural material with specific intersections with the natural world, arguing that Latin American literary and cultural production goes beyond ecocriticism as a theoretical framework of analysis. Gisela Heffes poses the following crucial question: How do we construct a conceptual theoretical apparatus to address issues of value, meaning, tradition, perspective, and language, that contributes substantially to environmental thinking, and that is part and parcel of Latin America? The book draws attention to ecological inequality and establishes a biopolitical, ethics-based reading of Latin American art, film, and literature that operates at the intersection of the built environment and urban settings. Heffes suggests that the aesthetic praxis that emerges in/from Latin America is permeated with a rhetoric of waste—a significant trait that overwhelmingly defines it.
Pushing Past the Human in Latin American Cinema
Author | : Carolyn Fornoff,Gisela Heffes |
Publsiher | : State University of New York Press |
Total Pages | : 433 |
Release | : 2021-06-01 |
Genre | : Performing Arts |
ISBN | : 9781438484051 |
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Pushing Past the Human in Latin American Cinema brings together fourteen scholars to analyze Latin American cinema in dialogue with recent theories of posthumanism and ecocriticism. Together they grapple with how Latin American filmmakers have attempted to "push past the human," and destabilize the myth of anthropocentric exceptionalism that has historically been privileged by cinema and has led to the current climate crisis. While some chapters question the very nature of this enterprise—whether cinema should or even could actualize such a maneuver beyond the human—others signal the ways in which the category of the "human" itself is interrogated by Latin American cinema, revealed to be a fiction that excludes more than it unifies. This volume explores how the moving image reinforces or contests the division between human and nonhuman, and troubles the settler epistemic partition of culture and nature that is at the core of the climate crisis. As the first volume to specifically address how such questions are staged by Latin American cinema, this book brings together analysis of films that respond to environmental degradation, as well as those that articulate a posthumanist ethos that blurs the line between species.