This volume collects original contributions discussing aspects, dimensions, and major problems of cultural mobility and knowledge formation in the Americas from an interdisciplinary and comparative perspective. Looking at the Americas as a site of multi-directional entanglement and interaction, the chapters highlight the non-English and non-European contexts of the United States from the 18th to the 20th century. They focus on processes of cultural hybridity resulting from the encounter of European, Native American, African, and Asian cultures in the Americas. Contributions to this volume come from the fields of history, political science, geography, literary criticism, and cultural studies. Besides investigating the intellectual construction of the Americas, the texts analyze the history of slavery and emancipation, trace African Diasporas in Columbia and Brazil, critically assess the problem of democracy in Latin America, and scrutinize phenomena of literary entanglements in the Western hemisphere.
Author(s): Volker Depkat, Britta Waldschmidt-Nelson
Series: Publications of the Bavarian American Academy, 20
Publisher: Universitatsverlag Winter
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 232
City: Heidelberg
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Titel
Imprint
Table of Contents
Framing the Discourse
Volker Depkat, Heike Paul, and Britta Waldschmidt-Nelson: Cultural Mobility and Knowledge Formation in the Americas: An Introduction
Part 1: The Intellectural Construction of ‘the Americas’
Susanne Lachenicht: How the Americas Came to Be Known as ‘the Americas’: A Historical Approach to the Western Hemisphere
Markus Heide: The Idea of the Western Hemisphere: Imperial Knowledge Production on the Americas in Travel Writing of the Early Nineteenth Century
Part 2: Slavery, Emancipation and African Heritage in ‘the Americas’
Christian Pinnen: The Cultural Transfer of Racial and Legal Traditions: The Natchez District During the Age of Revolutions
Ursula Prutsch: Slave Emancipation in Brazil and Cuba and Its Inter-American Dimension
Part 3: Space and Identity – Politics in Latin America
Valerie V.V. Gruber: Relational Geographies of Afro-Brazilian Identities: What Can We Learn from the Candeal Neighborhood in Salvador Da Bahia (Brazil)?
Gilma Mosquera Torres and Ángela María Franco Calderón: The Value of Collectivism: Property Rights, Urban Patterns, and Traditional Housing on the Colombian Pacific Coast
Part 4: Pan-American Literary Imaginations
Jobst Welge: The Boundaries of Reason: The Legacy of E.A. Poe in Latin America
Stephen M. Park: NAFTA and the Literary Imagination
Florian Tatschner: Literary Performance as Border Thinking: A Comparison of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s „Dictée“ and Norma Elia Cantú’s Canícula
Part 5: Successes and Challenges of Democracy in the Americas
Rainer Schmidt: Alternatives to Liberal Democracy – Revisited: Lessons from Latin America
Alan Siaroff: The Political Regimes of the Americas, 2000-2018, and Their Historical Origins
Notes on Contributors
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