Guaraná: How Brazil Embraced the World's Most Caffeine-Rich Plant

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In this sweeping chronicle of guarana—a glossy-leaved Amazonian vine packed with more caffeine than any other plant—Seth Garfield develops a wide-ranging approach to the history of Brazil itself. The story begins with guarana as the pre-Columbian cultivar of the Satere-Mawe people in the Lower Amazon region, where it figured centrally in the Indigenous nation's origin stories, dietary regimes, and communal ceremonies. During subsequent centuries of Portuguese colonialism and Brazilian rule, guarana was reformulated by settlers, scientists, folklorists, food technologists, and marketers. Whether in search of pleasure, profits, professional distinction, or patriotic markers, promoters imparted new meanings to guarana and found new uses for it. Today, it is the namesake ingredient of a multibillion-dollar soft drink industry and a beloved national symbol.

Guarana's journey elucidates human impacts on Amazonian ecosystems; the circulation of knowledge, goods, and power; and the promise of modernity in Latin America's largest nation. For Garfield, the beverage's history reveals not only the structuring of inequalities in Brazil but also the mythmaking and ordering of social practices that constitute so-called traditional and modern societies.

Author(s): Seth Garfield
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 336
City: Chapel Hill

Cover
Contents
List of Illustrations, Maps, and Table
Acknowledgments
Introduction: An Eye on the Past and the Present
Chapter One. Guaraná: The Roots of History and Myth
Chapter Two. Colonial Missions: Remaking Plants and People
Chapter Three. Silva Coutinho’s Plant: Nineteenth-Century Science and Amazonian Geopolitics
Chapter Four. Drug Prospects: Guaraná’s Anglo-American Boom and Bust
Chapter Five. From Guarani to Guaraná: Forging a National Industry
Chapter Six. Message in a Bottle: Selling Guaraná
Chapter Seven. Growing the Pie: Transformations in Brazilian Agriculture and Diet
Chapter Eight. Fast Times, Slow Food: Indigenizing Modernity
Conclusion: A Brazilian Original
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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