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More-Than-Human Histories of Latin America and the Caribbean: Cover
More-Than-Human Histories of Latin America and the Caribbean
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table of contents
Title page
Copyright
Contents
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Introduction: Latin America and the Caribbean’s more-than-human pasts
Notes
References
1. Performative objects: Konduri iconography as a window into precolonial Amazonian ontologies
The ethnological study of perception and other modes of figuration
A perspectivist iconography: motifs, attributes, relevance and visual themes
Konduri visual strategies: alternation and anatropy
An iconography of invisible beings
Conclusion
Notes
References
2. Under a weak sun at the southern rim of South America (1540–1650)
The smoking gun of the LIA in southern South America
The coming of the Maunder Minimum
Conclusion
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
3. Extreme weather in New Spain and Guatemala: the Great Drought (1768–73)
The climate and its adverse effects
The ‘mother of all evils’
Drought and crisis
Conclusion
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
4. Water labour: urban metabolism, energy and rivers in nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Carrying energy and matter into the city
Transformations within the river/urban system
Effluents, waste and products leave the river/urban system
The need for more rivers
Conclusion
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
5. Forjadores de la nación: rethinking the role of earthquakes in Chilean history
Earthquakes in (traditional) Chilean history
Not God but earthquakes (1810–1906)
The earthquake’s agenda (1906–2010)
Conclusions: Chile’s 200-year earthquake
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
6. Human–insect relations in Northeast Brazil’s twentieth-century sugar industry
On history, once more
Back to sugar, humans and insects in Brazil
Human–sugar–insect relations
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
7. ‘We are the air, the land, the pampas …’: campesino politics and the other-than-human in highland Bolivia 1970–90
Conceptualising the other-than-human in Latin America
Origins of the campesino movement and the rise of the CSUTCB
The CSUTCB and campesino ecological ontologies
Conclusion
Notes
References
Archival and primary sources
8. Tongues in trees and sermons in stones: Jason Allen-Paisant’s ecopoetics in Thinking with Trees
Notes
References
Primary sources
9. Animating the waters, hydrating history: control and contingency in Latin American animations
Abuela Grillo: privatisation and the Water War in Cochabamba
Nimbus, o Caçador de Nuvens: water and developmentalism in Brazil
Indifference, dissolution and contingency
Final remarks
Notes
References
Primary sources
Afterword: more complete stories and better explanations for a renewed worldview
Notes
References
Index
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