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In Amazonia: A Natural History

por Hugh Raffles

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The Amazon is not what it seems. As Hugh Raffles shows us in this captivating and innovative book, the world's last great wilderness has been transformed again and again by human activity. In Amazonia brings to life an Amazon whose allure and reality lie as much, or more, in what people have made of it as in what nature has wrought. It casts new light on centuries of encounter while describing the dramatic remaking of a sweeping landscape by residents of one small community in the Brazilian Amazon. Combining richly textured ethnographic research and lively historical analysis, Raffles weaves a fascinating story that changes our understanding of this region and challenges us to rethink what we mean by "nature." Raffles draws from a wide range of material to demonstrate--in contrast to the tendency to downplay human agency in the Amazon--that the region is an outcome of the intimately intertwined histories of humans and nonhumans. He moves between a detailed narrative that analyzes the production of scientific knowledge about Amazonia over the centuries and an absorbing account of the extraordinary transformations to the fluvial landscape carried out over the past forty years by the inhabitants of Igarapé Guariba, four hours downstream from the nearest city. Engagingly written, theoretically inventive, and vividly illustrated, the book introduces a diverse range of characters--from sixteenth-century explorers and their native rivals to nineteenth-century naturalists and contemporary ecologists, logging company executives, and river-traders. A natural history of a different kind, In Amazonia shows how humans, animals, rivers, and forests all participate in the making of a region that remains today at the center of debates in environmental politics.… (más)
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Just as river waters ceaselessly make and unmake its geography, the Amazonian landscape has proven pliant for contradictory and shifting human narratives. From Sir Walter Raleigh's political need for an El Dorado to a modern group of rural Brazilians bickering about a generation-old power struggle, the Amazon is generously and physically plastic.

I really like the core idea of In Amazonia -- that understanding the region is impossible unless you understand the multitude of contradictory "texts" embraced simultaneously by past conquerors and current residents -- but I was somewhat thrown by the tone of the book. Three-fourths of the book is richly anecdotal and conversational, whether the author is laying out the lifelong disappointments of naturalist Henry Walter Bates or turning an anthropological eye on the self-conscious residents of an Amazonian tributary during the 1990s. But these accounts are unexpectedly laced with abstract, jangly terminology, as if the author randomly felt the need to prove his chops as a Real Historian.

Admittedly, the reader probably knows what lies ahead after seeing the Walter Benjamin quote on the third page, but I was constantly jarred by the tonal shifts in the book. Perhaps it reveals my own biases when I prefer the straight reportage over the interpretative theory, but I'd like to think that there's a middle ground between the spoon-feeding found in "popular" history and the impenetrable, inside-baseball jargon present in academic history. In Amazonia handles its subject so smoothly and naturally most of the time that it's doubly disappointing when it fumbles towards some strained buzz word.

(Also: The In Amazonia drinking game includes the words "materiality" and "oneiric.")
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  proustbot | Jun 19, 2023 |
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The Amazon is not what it seems. As Hugh Raffles shows us in this captivating and innovative book, the world's last great wilderness has been transformed again and again by human activity. In Amazonia brings to life an Amazon whose allure and reality lie as much, or more, in what people have made of it as in what nature has wrought. It casts new light on centuries of encounter while describing the dramatic remaking of a sweeping landscape by residents of one small community in the Brazilian Amazon. Combining richly textured ethnographic research and lively historical analysis, Raffles weaves a fascinating story that changes our understanding of this region and challenges us to rethink what we mean by "nature." Raffles draws from a wide range of material to demonstrate--in contrast to the tendency to downplay human agency in the Amazon--that the region is an outcome of the intimately intertwined histories of humans and nonhumans. He moves between a detailed narrative that analyzes the production of scientific knowledge about Amazonia over the centuries and an absorbing account of the extraordinary transformations to the fluvial landscape carried out over the past forty years by the inhabitants of Igarapé Guariba, four hours downstream from the nearest city. Engagingly written, theoretically inventive, and vividly illustrated, the book introduces a diverse range of characters--from sixteenth-century explorers and their native rivals to nineteenth-century naturalists and contemporary ecologists, logging company executives, and river-traders. A natural history of a different kind, In Amazonia shows how humans, animals, rivers, and forests all participate in the making of a region that remains today at the center of debates in environmental politics.

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