The Environment in Brazilian Culture
Literature, Cinema, and the Arts

Edited by Patricia Vieira

Hardcover: $95.00
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Available for pre-order. This book will be available May, 2025
 

Examining Brazilian artists’ engagement with the natural world from 1900 to the present  
 
“A timely contribution to the environmental humanities field as well as a wonderful overview of Brazilian cultural production.”—Carolina Sá Carvalho Pereira, author of Traces of the Unseen: Photography, Violence, and Modernization in Early Twentieth-Century Latin America  
 
“Makes an important contribution to our understanding of how the environment and environmental crises are represented in Brazilian culture. The book’s breadth is impressive, not only in terms of its expansive definition of 'environment,' but also in terms of the cultural media examined such as literature, cinema and visual arts, as well as the attention to different geographical areas.”— Lúcia De Sá, author of Rain Forest Literatures: Amazonian Texts and Latin American Cultures
 
The Environment in Brazilian Culture explores the centrality of the natural world in shaping Brazilian literature, cinema, and art since 1900. This collection, exceptional in its representation of material from diverse locations and cultures within Brazil, as well as in its investigation of a range of artistic mediums and genres, portrays the human connection to nature in the most biodiverse country in the world.            
 
From the forests of the Amazon to the mountains of the Serra do Mar, this volume examines Brazilian depictions of different geographical regions and the plants and animals found in each. Contributors pay particular attention to the environment’s integral place in Indigenous identity and art. They also discuss artistic references to environmental devastation, underscoring the connection between ecological degradation and contemporary socioeconomic inequality. Works discussed in these chapters include novels by Itamar Vieira Junior and Maria José Silveira, poetry by Marília Floôr Kosby, Guarani and Bororo verbal arts, Huni Kui documentary films, and paintings by Candido Portinari.
 
These wide-ranging analyses highlight the value of Brazilian cultural production to critical plant and animal studies, posthumanism, and the environmental humanities. And, in grappling with Brazil’s extractivist past, they search for alternatives to a predatory approach to the land and its inhabitants, looking for pathways to environmental justice in the Anthropocene.  
 
Patricia Vieira is research professor at the Center for Social Studies at the University of Coimbra. Vieira is the author or editor of many books, including States of Grace: Utopia in Brazilian Culture.
 
Contributors: Victoria Saramago | Leila Lehnen | Rex P. Nielson | Maria Esther Maciel | Valeria Meiller | Benjamin Burt | Juliana Luna Freire | Nuno Marques | Cinthya Torres | Jens Andermann | Malcolm K. McNee | Patricia Isabel Lontro Marder Vieira | Martiniano Alcantara Neto

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