This dissertation examines how race and gender inform structures of imperialism in the Amazon during a period of heightened national and international attention from the late 19th to the early 20th century. Representations of the Amazon at this crucial period both during and later depicting the rubber boom, are full of ambiguities between civilized and savage, center and periphery, nature and culture. The Amazon emerges as a distinct region, a natural paradise devoid of civilization and in need of preservation, a place of promising riches, and/or a blank screen on which to project western ideas of progress. The material I consider includes natural histories, travelogues, biography, fiction, photographs, and film. These texts represent many ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06The dissertation explores preformations of the Amaz...
Amazonia: A Laboratory for Fiction, analyzes the process and the forms through which Amazonia became...
AbstractTemporal and spatial locations are deeply rooted in relations of power; hegemony has thus be...
This dissertation examines how race and gender inform structures of imperialism in the Amazon during...
This dissertation identifies and evaluates the ways in which the Amazon myth has functioned. The Ama...
The decline of the first Amazonian Rubber Boom in 1912 was only the beginning of Amazonia’s emergenc...
Imperial Europe’s relationship with the tropical world was characterized by intrigue and fascination...
Recent scholarship on the Amazon has challenged depictions of the region that emphasize its natural ...
Coloniality, or the living legacies and practices of the 500 years of European colonization, has pro...
Amazonia in contemporary academic as well as public discourse is often placed in opposition to moder...
Chronicling the dramatic history of the Brazilian Amazon during the Second World War, Seth Garfield ...
The authors acknowledge funding from the Leverhulme Trust, the British Academy and the Sir Ernest Ca...
My research examines the representation of women during the Amazon Rubber Boom in the work of noveli...
Oil production in the northern Ecuadorian Amazon has facilitated the urbanization of some of the wor...
The present dissertation analyzes the novels The Green House (1966) and The Storyteller (1987), by P...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06The dissertation explores preformations of the Amaz...
Amazonia: A Laboratory for Fiction, analyzes the process and the forms through which Amazonia became...
AbstractTemporal and spatial locations are deeply rooted in relations of power; hegemony has thus be...
This dissertation examines how race and gender inform structures of imperialism in the Amazon during...
This dissertation identifies and evaluates the ways in which the Amazon myth has functioned. The Ama...
The decline of the first Amazonian Rubber Boom in 1912 was only the beginning of Amazonia’s emergenc...
Imperial Europe’s relationship with the tropical world was characterized by intrigue and fascination...
Recent scholarship on the Amazon has challenged depictions of the region that emphasize its natural ...
Coloniality, or the living legacies and practices of the 500 years of European colonization, has pro...
Amazonia in contemporary academic as well as public discourse is often placed in opposition to moder...
Chronicling the dramatic history of the Brazilian Amazon during the Second World War, Seth Garfield ...
The authors acknowledge funding from the Leverhulme Trust, the British Academy and the Sir Ernest Ca...
My research examines the representation of women during the Amazon Rubber Boom in the work of noveli...
Oil production in the northern Ecuadorian Amazon has facilitated the urbanization of some of the wor...
The present dissertation analyzes the novels The Green House (1966) and The Storyteller (1987), by P...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06The dissertation explores preformations of the Amaz...
Amazonia: A Laboratory for Fiction, analyzes the process and the forms through which Amazonia became...
AbstractTemporal and spatial locations are deeply rooted in relations of power; hegemony has thus be...