Chronicling Amazon Town

Eight Decades of Research and Engagement in Gurupá, Brazil

Publication Date:  
Aug 2024

9781683404446

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Brings together the work of researchers from a variety of fields to provide a comprehensive synthesis of local and regional studies in the town of Gurupa in Brazil, ranging from archaeological findings to ethnohistory and sociocultural anthropology.

A long-term view of continuity and change in a rural Amazonian community

In Chronicling Amazon Town, Richard Pace and Helena Lima bring together the work of researchers from a variety of fields to provide a comprehensive synthesis of local and regional studies in the town of Gurupá in Brazil, ranging from archaeological findings to ethnohistory and sociocultural anthropology.

Building upon and critiquing Charles Wagley’s 1955 book Amazon Town, the authors in this volume focus on Gurupá as a crossroad of sociocultural changes in the lower Amazon region. Drawing on continuous research in this location since the publication of Wagley’s book, they use a longitudinal approach to examine archaeological, historical, and contemporary cultural patterns, situating their investigations within the greater Amazonian context. These chapters examine topics including race and identity, kinship and marriage, gender roles, migration patterns, and religious and political social movements. They also address challenges facing sustainable development and conservation efforts in the Amazon rainforest, including extractive economies and struggles over land tenure.

Chronicling Amazon Town adds an important long-term historical understanding of Gurupá, documents how community members have related to the surrounding environment and their social categories, and assesses the influence of regional, national, and global processes. This unique book offers an extended view of continuity and change in one of the longest and most fully studied rural communities in the region.

Contributors:Bruno Moraes | Monte Talley | Glenn H. Shepard, Jr. | Gabrielle Botelho | André Lima | Barbara Silva | Lucy Dodd | Paul Chilsen | Cristiana Barreto | Richard Pace | Kyle L. Harper | Helena P. Lima | Brian P. Hinote | Lorena Pavão | Ezequiel Barbosa da Silva | Kevin McDaniel | Fábio dos Passos Alho | Cynthia Pace Cisneros | John Ben Soileau | DR Nigel J.H. Smith | Dr, Andrew R. Wyatt | Robson Lopes | Cássia Luzia Lobato Benathar | Matthew Abel | Christine Printz | Fernando Luiz Tavares Marques | Morgan J. Schmidt | Pedro Alves Vieira

Richard Pace, professor of sociology and anthropology at Middle Tennessee State University, is coauthor of Amazon Town TV: An Audience Ethnography in Gurupá, Brazil.

Helena Lima, senior lecturer for the graduate program in sociocultural diversity and curator of the archaeological collection at the Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi Museum in Belém, Brazil, is coauthor of Koriabo: From the Caribbean Sea to the Amazon River.
Illustrations44 b&w illus., 17 tables
Pages490
Date Published13 Aug 2024
PublisherUniversity Press of Florida
LanguageEnglish
Dimensions235 x 155

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