The Interior
Recentering Brazilian History
Herausgeber: Freitas, Frederico; Blanc, Jacob
The Interior
Recentering Brazilian History
Herausgeber: Freitas, Frederico; Blanc, Jacob
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A new history of Brazil told through the lens of the often-overlooked interior regions.
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A new history of Brazil told through the lens of the often-overlooked interior regions.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Januar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 162mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9781477330371
- ISBN-10: 1477330372
- Artikelnr.: 69926395
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Januar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 162mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9781477330371
- ISBN-10: 1477330372
- Artikelnr.: 69926395
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Frederico Freitas and Jacob Blanc
1. Introduction (Frederico Freitas and Jacob Blanc)
2. Part I. The Knowledge Interior
* Chapter 1. Indigenous Spies and Surveillance in Late Colonial Brazil
(Heather F. Roller)
* Chapter 2. Imagined Sertões: The Quest for Silver, Indigenous
Conquest, and the Circulation of Knowledge in the Bahian Interior
(Judy Bieber)
* Chapter 3. The Interior as Borderlands: The Campanha at the Edge of
Empire (Fabrício Prado)
* Chapter 4. São Paulo and Its Interior in the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries (Carlos de Almeida Prado Bacellar)
3. Part II. The National Interior
* Chapter 5. Moral Grounds: Plants and Plans for Imperial Brazil’s
Backlands (Seth Garfield)
* Chapter 6. The Romantic Sertões (Lúcia Sá)
* Chapter 7. Charting the Planalto Central: The Quest for a New Capital
and the Opening of the Brazilian Interior in the 1890s (Frederico
Freitas)
4. Part III. The Roving Interior
* Chapter 8. The Wandering Bororo of Central Brazil in Photo Albums and
the 1908 National Exhibition in Rio de Janeiro (Antonio Luigi Negro)
* Chapter 9. A Cartographic Picaresque: The Prestes Column and the
Symbolism of Brazil’s Interior (Jacob Blanc)
5. Part IV. The Transformed Interior
* Chapter 10. The March toward the Hinterland: The West as Geographic
Fiction and the Conquering of Central Brazil (Sandro Dutra e Silva)
* Chapter 11. From Boi Gordo to Biofuel: Western São Paulo and the
Transformation of Rural Brazil (Thomas D. Rogers)
6. Epilogue. The Interior and the Scale of History (Susanna Hecht)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
2. Part I. The Knowledge Interior
* Chapter 1. Indigenous Spies and Surveillance in Late Colonial Brazil
(Heather F. Roller)
* Chapter 2. Imagined Sertões: The Quest for Silver, Indigenous
Conquest, and the Circulation of Knowledge in the Bahian Interior
(Judy Bieber)
* Chapter 3. The Interior as Borderlands: The Campanha at the Edge of
Empire (Fabrício Prado)
* Chapter 4. São Paulo and Its Interior in the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries (Carlos de Almeida Prado Bacellar)
3. Part II. The National Interior
* Chapter 5. Moral Grounds: Plants and Plans for Imperial Brazil’s
Backlands (Seth Garfield)
* Chapter 6. The Romantic Sertões (Lúcia Sá)
* Chapter 7. Charting the Planalto Central: The Quest for a New Capital
and the Opening of the Brazilian Interior in the 1890s (Frederico
Freitas)
4. Part III. The Roving Interior
* Chapter 8. The Wandering Bororo of Central Brazil in Photo Albums and
the 1908 National Exhibition in Rio de Janeiro (Antonio Luigi Negro)
* Chapter 9. A Cartographic Picaresque: The Prestes Column and the
Symbolism of Brazil’s Interior (Jacob Blanc)
5. Part IV. The Transformed Interior
* Chapter 10. The March toward the Hinterland: The West as Geographic
Fiction and the Conquering of Central Brazil (Sandro Dutra e Silva)
* Chapter 11. From Boi Gordo to Biofuel: Western São Paulo and the
Transformation of Rural Brazil (Thomas D. Rogers)
6. Epilogue. The Interior and the Scale of History (Susanna Hecht)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
1. Introduction (Frederico Freitas and Jacob Blanc)
2. Part I. The Knowledge Interior
* Chapter 1. Indigenous Spies and Surveillance in Late Colonial Brazil
(Heather F. Roller)
* Chapter 2. Imagined Sertões: The Quest for Silver, Indigenous
Conquest, and the Circulation of Knowledge in the Bahian Interior
(Judy Bieber)
* Chapter 3. The Interior as Borderlands: The Campanha at the Edge of
Empire (Fabrício Prado)
* Chapter 4. São Paulo and Its Interior in the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries (Carlos de Almeida Prado Bacellar)
3. Part II. The National Interior
* Chapter 5. Moral Grounds: Plants and Plans for Imperial Brazil’s
Backlands (Seth Garfield)
* Chapter 6. The Romantic Sertões (Lúcia Sá)
* Chapter 7. Charting the Planalto Central: The Quest for a New Capital
and the Opening of the Brazilian Interior in the 1890s (Frederico
Freitas)
4. Part III. The Roving Interior
* Chapter 8. The Wandering Bororo of Central Brazil in Photo Albums and
the 1908 National Exhibition in Rio de Janeiro (Antonio Luigi Negro)
* Chapter 9. A Cartographic Picaresque: The Prestes Column and the
Symbolism of Brazil’s Interior (Jacob Blanc)
5. Part IV. The Transformed Interior
* Chapter 10. The March toward the Hinterland: The West as Geographic
Fiction and the Conquering of Central Brazil (Sandro Dutra e Silva)
* Chapter 11. From Boi Gordo to Biofuel: Western São Paulo and the
Transformation of Rural Brazil (Thomas D. Rogers)
6. Epilogue. The Interior and the Scale of History (Susanna Hecht)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
2. Part I. The Knowledge Interior
* Chapter 1. Indigenous Spies and Surveillance in Late Colonial Brazil
(Heather F. Roller)
* Chapter 2. Imagined Sertões: The Quest for Silver, Indigenous
Conquest, and the Circulation of Knowledge in the Bahian Interior
(Judy Bieber)
* Chapter 3. The Interior as Borderlands: The Campanha at the Edge of
Empire (Fabrício Prado)
* Chapter 4. São Paulo and Its Interior in the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries (Carlos de Almeida Prado Bacellar)
3. Part II. The National Interior
* Chapter 5. Moral Grounds: Plants and Plans for Imperial Brazil’s
Backlands (Seth Garfield)
* Chapter 6. The Romantic Sertões (Lúcia Sá)
* Chapter 7. Charting the Planalto Central: The Quest for a New Capital
and the Opening of the Brazilian Interior in the 1890s (Frederico
Freitas)
4. Part III. The Roving Interior
* Chapter 8. The Wandering Bororo of Central Brazil in Photo Albums and
the 1908 National Exhibition in Rio de Janeiro (Antonio Luigi Negro)
* Chapter 9. A Cartographic Picaresque: The Prestes Column and the
Symbolism of Brazil’s Interior (Jacob Blanc)
5. Part IV. The Transformed Interior
* Chapter 10. The March toward the Hinterland: The West as Geographic
Fiction and the Conquering of Central Brazil (Sandro Dutra e Silva)
* Chapter 11. From Boi Gordo to Biofuel: Western São Paulo and the
Transformation of Rural Brazil (Thomas D. Rogers)
6. Epilogue. The Interior and the Scale of History (Susanna Hecht)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index