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Plants and Animals in Latin American Cultural Production - by Cristina E Pardo Porto & Oscar A Pérez (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Challenging anthropocentric perspectives by highlighting cultural representations of plants and animals across Latin American historyThe first book to integrate both critical plant studies and critical animal studies within the context of Latin American culture, this collection explores the relationships between plants, animals, and humans across various countries and historical periods and through various kinds of media.
- About the Author: Cristina E. Pardo Porto is assistant professor of Latin American and Latinx visual cultures at Syracuse University.
- 334 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Caribbean & Latin American
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About the Book
Exploring the relationships between plants, animals, and humans across various countries and historical periods and through a wide range of cultural production, this collection challenges anthropocentric perspectives and offers a deeper understanding of Latin America's natural environment.Book Synopsis
Challenging anthropocentric perspectives by highlighting cultural representations of plants and animals across Latin American history
The first book to integrate both critical plant studies and critical animal studies within the context of Latin American culture, this collection explores the relationships between plants, animals, and humans across various countries and historical periods and through various kinds of media. Acknowledging nonhuman species as coproducers of culture, this volume offers a deeper understanding of the region's natural environment and humanity's place in it.
Contributors analyze a wide range of cultural production, including recent science films on monarch butterfly migration, nineteenth-century photographs of Panama, the eighteenth-century diary of a nun in New Granada, 1920s Brazilian landscape paintings, contemporary Zapotec poetry, and twentieth-century vegetarian cookbooks from Uruguay and Mexico. By focusing on plants and animals, these essays uncover the entanglements of nonhuman lives with issues such as race, gender, labor, and coloniality, while highlighting other-than-human ways of living, knowing, and communicating.
Plants and Animals in Latin American Cultural Production promotes a deeper understanding of cultural forms in Latin America and breaks down disciplinary divides--both between critical animal studies and critical plant studies and among fields such as literary studies, film studies, and art history. Ultimately, this collection challenges anthropocentric perspectives as it offers new pathways to think about and with plants and animals.
Contributors: Patricia Isabel Lontro Marder Vieira Jorge Quintana Navarrete Beatriz Rivera-Barnes Brian T. Chandler Oscar A. Pérez Niall A. Peach Pilar Espitia Jonathan Mulki Cristina E. Pardo Porto Thomaz Amancio Micah McKay Ana Carolina Carmona-Ribeiro Vanesa Miseres Víctor Sierra Matute Kate Ostrom Emily Celeste Vázquez Enríquez Dr. Mauricio Espinoza
About the Author
Cristina E. Pardo Porto is assistant professor of Latin American and Latinx visual cultures at Syracuse University. Oscar A. Pérez is professor of Spanish at Skidmore College and the author of Medicine, Power, and the Authoritarian Regime in Hispanic Literature.