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The Forbidden Lands Colonial Identity Frontier Violence and the Persistence of Brazils Eastern Indians 1750-1830 at Meripustak

The Forbidden Lands Colonial Identity Frontier Violence and the Persistence of Brazils Eastern Indians 1750-1830 by Hal Langfur, Stanford University Press

Books from same Author: Hal Langfur

Books from same Publisher: Stanford University Press

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Hal Langfur
    PublisherStanford University Press
    ISBN9780804751803
    Pages432
    BindingHardcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJuly 2006

    Description

    Stanford University Press The Forbidden Lands Colonial Identity Frontier Violence and the Persistence of Brazils Eastern Indians 1750-1830 by Hal Langfur

    The Forbidden Lands concerns a pivotal but unexamined surge in frontier violence that engulfed the eastern forests of eighteenth-century Brazil's most populous region, Minas Gerais. Focusing on social, cultural, and racial relations, it challenges standard depictions of the occupation of Portuguese America's vast interior, while situating its frontier history in the broader context of the Americas and the Atlantic world. The author argues that the key to understanding the colony's internal consolidation-ignored and misconstrued by scholars fixed on coastal events and export-led development-resides in the incompatible ways in which Luso-Brazilians, Afro-Brazilians, and seminomadic indigenous peoples accused of cannibalism sought to territorialize their distinctive societies. He demonstrates that cultural conflict on the frontier was a defining characteristic of Brazil's transition from colony to independent nation and a fundamental consequence of its relationship to a wider world. The study moves Brazil to a prominent place in our understanding of the hemispheric sweep of internal colonization in the Americas.Essays based on material in this book have won the 2006 CLAH Prize and the 2005 Tibesar Prize.show more



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