More-Than-Human Histories of Latin America and the Caribbean
Decentring the Human in Environmental History
Contributor(s)
de Carvalho Cabral, Diogo (editor)
Vasques Vital, André (editor)
Gascón, Margarita (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The Latin American and Caribbean regions’ historical trajectories have been shaped by complex human-nonhuman interactions. In these histories people are important, even crucial, actors, but not the only ones. Offering a novel approach to the writing of Latin American history, this book brings nine thought-provoking chapters together with a historiographical introduction and critical afterword to centre nonhuman beings and things. The oscillating glare of the sun, the resourcefulness of insects, the tectonic instability of national territories, and the life-giving and intractable impassivity of rivers are some of the other-than-human agents driving history in the volume’s chapters. It problematises Latin American(ist) historiography’s tendency to frame ‘nature’ as a separate ontological domain that is only acted upon – conquered, manipulated, devastated – lacking the self-propelled dynamics capable of shaping the course of events. With broad regional and temporal coverage across Latin America and the Caribbean from the pre-colonial period to the present day, the book responds to environmental history’s call to write biophysical environments into the human past – a reconsideration of historical agency that, in this era of climate change, is needed now more than ever.
Keywords
ecology;south america;latin america;environmental humanities;Caribbean;historiography;non-human;climate change;biophysical;historyDOI
10.14296/cmpd3083ISBN
9781915249524Publisher
University of London PressPublisher website
https://uolpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2024Classification
History of the Americas
Environmentalist thought and ideology
Historiography