Description
Ranging from the immediate aftermath of the Spanish-American Wars of Independence (1810-1826) to the early twentieth century (1925), the volume's essays cover a wide variety of genres and forms of cultural production, from JosE HernAndez's epic poem MartIn Fierro to prose fiction, painting and photography, and the personal albums compiled by Spanish-American women. Individually and collectively, the essays engage with scientific writing as both a discourse of power and a source of potentially significant, even revelatory information about human and nonhuman nature. Changes in the Landscape enables readers to more fully understand the transition from colonial regimes to the ecocidal extractivism of the export boom (1870-1930) by drawing out and analyzing some of the cognitive resources and rhetorical strategies that were available to imagine, protest, or enact new norms and expectations regarding the relations between human and nonhuman life, be it the life of wildflowers, waterfalls, or Cuba's CiEnaga de Zapata.
About the Author
Jennifer L. French is the Rosenburg Professor of Environmental Studies and Spanish at Williams College.
Book Information
ISBN 9780826507457
Author Jennifer L. French
Format Paperback
Page Count 300
Imprint Vanderbilt University Press
Publisher Vanderbilt University Press