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2005

6 x 9 in.
391 pp., 20 figures, 11 maps, 2 tables

ISBN: 978-0-292-71276-8
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 
 
     

Go-Betweens and the Colonization of Brazil
1500-1600

By Alida C. Metcalf

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"Based on a broad array of sources, including extensive archival research, this book presents a provocatively new interpretation of indigenous-European relations in Portuguese America, as they unfolded over the course of the sixteenth century.... The topic is fascinating and the sources extremely rich and suggestive."

—John Monteiro, Anthropology Department, UNICAMP, Brazil, and Visiting Professor of History, Harvard University

Doña Marina (La Malinche) ...Pocahontas ...Sacagawea—their names live on in historical memory because these women bridged the indigenous American and European worlds, opening the way for the cultural encounters, collisions, and fusions that shaped the social and even physical landscape of the modern Americas. But these famous individuals were only a few of the many thousands of people who, intentionally or otherwise, served as "go-betweens" as Europeans explored and colonized the New World.

In this innovative history, Alida Metcalf thoroughly investigates the many roles played by go-betweens in the colonization of sixteenth-century Brazil. She finds that many individuals created physical links among Europe, Africa, and Brazil—explorers, traders, settlers, and slaves circulated goods, plants, animals, and diseases. Intercultural liaisons produced mixed-race children. At the cultural level, Jesuit priests and African slaves infused native Brazilian traditions with their own religious practices, while translators became influential go-betweens, negotiating the terms of trade, interaction, and exchange. Most powerful of all, as Metcalf shows, were those go-betweens who interpreted or represented new lands and peoples through writings, maps, religion, and the oral tradition. Metcalf's convincing demonstration that colonization is always mediated by third parties has relevance far beyond the Brazilian case, even as it opens a revealing new window on the first century of Brazilian history.

Alida C. Metcalf is Professor of History at Trinity University in San Antonio.


 Also by the Author Family and Frontier in Colonial Brazil

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