Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Big Water: The Making of the Borderlands Between Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Foreword by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x154x30 mm, weight: 610 g, 23 black & white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Apr-2018
  • Leidėjas: University of Arizona Press
  • ISBN-10: 0816537143
  • ISBN-13: 9780816537143
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x154x30 mm, weight: 610 g, 23 black & white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Apr-2018
  • Leidėjas: University of Arizona Press
  • ISBN-10: 0816537143
  • ISBN-13: 9780816537143
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"A transnational approach to the history of a key Latin American border region"--Provided by publisher.

Big Water explores four centuries of the overlapping histories of Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay (the Triple Frontier), and the colonies that preceded them. Examining an important area that includes some of the first national parks established in Latin America and one of the world’s largest hydroelectric dams, this transnational approach illustrates how these three nation-states have interacted over time.
 
From the Jesuit reductions in the seventeenth century to the flows of capital and goods accelerated by contemporary trade agreements, the Triple Frontier region has proven fundamental to the development of Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay, as well as to the Southern Cone and South America itself. Although historians from each of these three countries have tended to construct narratives that stop at their respective borders, the contributors call for a reinterpretation that goes beyond the material and conceptual boundaries of the Triple Frontier. In offering a transnational approach, Big Water helps transcend nation-centered blind spots and approach new understandings of how space and society have developed throughout Latin America.
 
These essays complicate traditional frontier histories and balance the excessive weight previously given to empires, nations, and territorial expansion. Overcoming stagnant comparisons between national cases, the research explores regional identity beyond border and geopolitical divides. Thus, Big Water focuses on the uniquely overlapping character of the Triple Frontier and emphasizes a perspective usually left at the periphery of national histories.

Contributors
 
Shawn Michael Austin
Jacob Blanc
Bridget María Chesterton
Christine Folch
Zephyr Frank
Frederico Freitas
Michael Kenneth Huner
Evaldo Mendes da Silva
Eunice Sueli Nodari
Graciela Silvestri
Guillermo Wilde
Daryle Williams


Big Water focuses on the uniquely overlapping character of South America’s Triple Frontier. These essays complicate the frontiers and balance the excessive weight previously given to empires, nations, and territorial expansion. Big Water’s transdisciplinary approach provides a new understanding of how space and society have developed throughout Latin America.

Recenzijos

A seminal, multidisciplinary study of the less understood but ever-so-important corner of South America known as the Triple Frontier. Big Water analyzes the many dimensions of the region's past through sound borderlands, environmental, economic, and social history lenses."" - Sterling Evans, University of Oklahoma

Foreword vii
Zephyr Frank
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 3(22)
Jacob Blanc
Frederico Freitas
PART I ADAPTATION
1 Embodied Borderland: Colonial Guaira, 1570s--1630s
25(29)
Shawn Michael Austin
2 Jesuit Missions and the Guarani Ethnogenesis: Political Interactions, Indigenous Actors, and Regional Networks on the Southern Frontier of the Iberian Empires
54(27)
Guillermo Wilde
PART II ENVIRONMENT
3 Crossing Borders: Immigration and Transformation of Landscapes in Misiones Province, Argentina, and Southern Brazil
81(24)
Eunice Sueli Nodari
4 Argentinizing the Border: Conservation and Colonization in the Iguazu National Park, 1890s--1950s
105(26)
Frederico Freitas
PART III BELONGING
5 A Devilish Prank, a Dodgy Caudillo, and the Tortured Production of Postcolonial Sovereignty in the Borderlands of Lopez-Era Paraguay
131(27)
Michael Kenneth Huner
6 Beyond historia patria: The Jesuit-Guarani Missions, World Heritage, and Other Histories of Cultural Patrimony in Mercosul/Mercosur
158(28)
Daryle Williams
7 Walking on the Bad Land: The Guarani Indians in the Triple Frontier
186(25)
Evaldo Mendes Da Silva
PART IV DEVELOPMENT
8 A Turbulent Border: Geopolitics and the Hydroelectric Development of the Parana River
211(31)
Jacob Blanc
9 From Porteno to Pontero: The Shifting of Paraguayan Geography and Identity in Asuncion in the Early Years of the Stroessner Regime
242(25)
Bridget Maria Chesterton
10 Ciudad del Este and the Common Market A Tale of Two Economic Integrations
267(18)
Christine Folch
Conclusion: Space, Nation, and Frontiers in the Rioplatense Discourse 285(30)
Graciela Silvestri
Contributors 315(4)
Index 319
Jacob Blanc is a lecturer in Latin American history at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. His work has appeared in the Journal of Latin American Studies, the Journal of Peasant Studies, and the Luso-Brazilian Review.

Frederico Freitas is an assistant professor of Latin American and digital history at North Carolina State University and an investigator at the Visual Narrative Initiative. His work has appeared in HIb: Revista de Historia Iberoamericana.