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Nancy Leys Stepan - Picturing Tropical Nature - 9781861891464 - V9781861891464
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Picturing Tropical Nature

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Description for Picturing Tropical Nature Paperback. In this work, Nancy Stepan explores the ways in which the Tropics, in particular tropical nature, places, animals and people, were imagined and presented in European culture from the 19th century on. Series: Picturing History. Num Pages: 288 pages, 89 illustrations. BIC Classification: 3JH; 3JJ; AB; HBTB; JFC; RGBL. Category: (G) General (US: Trade); (P) Professional & Vocational; (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly; (UU) Undergraduate. Dimension: 230 x 155 x 20. Weight in Grams: 622.

Whether as sublime landscape, malignant wilderness or site for environmental conflicts and eco-tourism, tropical nature is to a great extent an American and European imaginative construct, conveyed in literature, travel writing, drawings, paintings, photographs and diagrams. These images are central to Nancy Leys Stepan's view that a critical examination of the 'tropicalization of nature' can remedy some of the most persistent misrepresentations of the tropics and its peoples.

Picturing Tropical Nature reflects on the work of several nineteenth- and twentieth-century scientists and artists, including Alexander von Humboldt, Alfred Russel Wallace, Louis Agassiz, Sir Patrick Manson and Margaret Mee. Their careers illuminate several aspects of tropicalization: science and art in the making of tropical pictures; the commercial and cultural boom in things tropical in the modern period; photographic attempts to represent tropical hybrid races; anti-tropicalism and its role in an emerging environmentalist sensibility; and visual depictions of disease in the new tropical medicine. Essential to Stepan's analysis are the responses to European projections of artists, scientists and intellectuals living in tropical regions. She examines the long-standing Brazilian fantasy of the tropics as a racial democracy and offers an evaluation of the impact of tropical plants and European conceptions of the jungle on the anti-mimetic, modernist aesthetics of the brilliant landscape designer Roberto Burle Marx. Stepan's fascinating inquiry identifies the conflicts over meaning that have shaped the emergence of the tropics, and in so doing questions the nature of representation itself.

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2002
Publisher
Reaktion Books United Kingdom
Number of pages
288
Condition
New
Series
Picturing History
Number of Pages
288
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781861891464
SKU
V9781861891464
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15

About Nancy Leys Stepan
Nancy Leys Stepan is Professor Emeritus of History at Columbia University, New York. Her previous books include The Hour of Eugenics: Race, Gender and Nation (1991) and Picturing Tropical Nature (Reaktion Books, 2002).

Reviews for Picturing Tropical Nature
[a] brilliant and provocative book . . . The kind of book that carries forward a field in a single stride. It is both an insightful account of tropicality and a cultural history of Brazil, in which environment, race, disease and aesthetics constantly and uncomfortably intersect . . . [Stepan] moves freely from broad trends in the representation of the tropics to the more intimate imaginings of the representative figures around whom her narrative is constructed. This is undoubtedly the finest account of "tropicality" we have.
Social History of Medicine
A fascinating examination of how the tropics have come to be represented since the eighteenth century, drawing mostly on a marvelous array of materials from Brazil . . . Some of the images she brings to light are truly gruesome, but she uses them well to demonstrate how the tropics became a place of peculiarity - and how indelible many of these perceptions remain.
Foreign Affairs
This fascinating book situates current ecological and social fears of environmental degeneration in the context of changing Western perceptions of natives and tropical wilderness. It is a critical study well worth the read for scholars interested in the history of shifting perceptions of nature.
Metascience
In Picturing Tropical Nature, Nancy Leys Stepan offers a beautiful and fascinating portrait of a subject many people have rarely taken the time to consider.
Virginia Quarterly Review
In this lucid and well-researched [book], Nancy Leys Stepan, an expert on both Latin America and the history of race . . . [analyzes] the range of visual practices through which South American nature was represented in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Organizing her study around depictions of tropical nature, diseases, and races, Stepan convincingly argues that the entire Victorian understanding of the tropical was profoundly shaped by sophisticated visual strategies and genres, and that South America, more than any other region, functioned as the site of tropical nature par excellence.
Victorian Studies
Nancy Leys Stepan, whose books on race and eugenics have been rightly acclaimed, has now moved into the field of analysis of illustrations to add to this growing literature on the tropics . . . Stepan marshals some intriguing material, and it is all handled with verve and style. The sections on medicine and medical photography are particularly acute.
American Historical Review
Important historical scholarship offers insights by examining underdeveloped subjects, periods, or areas by demonstrating new methodological approaches or by drawing connections between seemingly disparate fields and disciplines. Picturing Tropical Nature, by Nancy Leys Stepan, succeeds on each of these levels. With images of the South American tropics as her focal point, Stepan demonstrates the significance of this neglected region and several largely ignored scientists, while locating the common ground between environmental history, history of science, and history of medicine . . . breaks new ground in revealing the significance of images in the analysis of scientific, medical, and cultural beliefs regarding tropical spaces, peoples, and diseases. One can only hope that others will follow Stepan's lead and begin to explore the fertile territory of imagery in the tropics.
Journal of the History of Biology
In this beautifully illustrated and fascinating book by Nancy Stepan, images of the tropics have had everything to do with how we have perceived the lands between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn . . . an important and innovative work that helps us rethink and reimagine the American tropics.
The Americas
Not only environmental art history but also philosophy and ethics enter into Picturing Tropical Nature as the author deftly steers her course through a selection of nineteenth century exploration illustrations, the racial photographs of Agassizian science and an exposition of the concept of tropical disease. It is a challenging agenda which addresses current issues of environmental concern ranging from wilderness preservation and biological imperialism to aboriginal rights and identities.
Environmental History

Goodreads reviews for Picturing Tropical Nature