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Picturing Tropical Nature [electronic resource]

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Reaktion Books - Picturing History SerPublication details: London : Reaktion Books, Limited Feb. 2006 Chicago : Chicago Distribution Center [Distributor]Description: 283 p.; 26 cm ill (col)ISBN:
  • 9781861891464
  • 1861891466 (Trade Paper)
DDC classification:
  • 909.093 ST827p
Online resources: Art SourceAnnotation Whether considered a sublime landscape, malignant wilderness, or the endangered site of environmental conflicts, the tropics are,Picturing Tropical Natureargues, largely a construct of American and European imaginations. Nancy Leys Stephan asserts that images of the tropics conveyed through drawings, paintings, photographs, literature, and travel writings are central to what Stepan calls the "tropicalization of nature," or the often harmful misrepresentation of the tropics and its peoples. She here examines several aspects of such tropicalization as they emerge through the work of nineteenth- and twentieth-century scientists and artists, including Alexander von Humboldt, Alfred Russel Wallace, Louis Agassiz, Sir Patrick Manson, and Margaret Mee. From the earliest photographic attempts to represent tropical hybrid races to depictions of disease in new tropical medicines,Picturing Tropical Natureoffers new insight into the convergence of the tropics with European and American science and art. "A brilliant and provocative book . . . the kind of book that carries forward a field in a single stride . . . undoubtedly the finest account of 'tropicality' we have."-Social History of Medicine
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Annotation Whether considered a sublime landscape, malignant wilderness, or the endangered site of environmental conflicts, the tropics are,Picturing Tropical Natureargues, largely a construct of American and European imaginations. Nancy Leys Stephan asserts that images of the tropics conveyed through drawings, paintings, photographs, literature, and travel writings are central to what Stepan calls the "tropicalization of nature," or the often harmful misrepresentation of the tropics and its peoples. She here examines several aspects of such tropicalization as they emerge through the work of nineteenth- and twentieth-century scientists and artists, including Alexander von Humboldt, Alfred Russel Wallace, Louis Agassiz, Sir Patrick Manson, and Margaret Mee. From the earliest photographic attempts to represent tropical hybrid races to depictions of disease in new tropical medicines,Picturing Tropical Natureoffers new insight into the convergence of the tropics with European and American science and art. "A brilliant and provocative book . . . the kind of book that carries forward a field in a single stride . . . undoubtedly the finest account of 'tropicality' we have."-Social History of Medicine

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