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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01hm50tv13h
Title: Traces of the Unseen: Photography, Writing and Contact in Three Expeditions in the Tropics
Authors: Sa Carvalho Pereira, Carolina
Advisors: Nouzeilles, Gabriela
Cadava, Eduardo
Contributors: Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Cultures Department
Keywords: Archive
Critical Theory
Memory
Photography
Travel Literature
Walter Benjamin
Subjects: Latin American studies
Comparative literature
Aesthetics
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University
Abstract: Traces of the Unseen examines the presence of images of ruins, scars, and ashes in the archives of early twentieth-century encounters between western travelers and local communities in remote regions of Brazil and Peru. It considers the use of photographs, field-notes, and diaries in government reports, travel-books and monographs related to three voyages: journalist Euclides da Cunha's 1897 venture to Canudos in Northeastern Brazil; British Consul Roger Casement's 1910 expedition to investigate the abuses suffered by Putumayo indigenous communities during the Amazonian rubber boom; and French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss's ethnographic research in central Brazil in the 1930s. Chapter one centers on da Cunha’s use of field-notes, manuscripts, and photographs in his canonical book Os sertões. It considers his efforts to inscribe Canudos and its archives into a historical narrative of a nascent Republic and its modernizing impulse. In chapter two, Casement’s challenge is to produce material proof of crimes committed in the Peruvian Amazon. While da Cunha constructed a national event from the ruins of Canudos, Casement concludes that the visibility of marks of torture depended on the onlooker’s “point-of-view.” Lastly, chapter three analyzes Lévi-Strauss's Brazilian archive to engage debates on the phenomenology of the photo-ethnographic encounter and the scientific value of the written, drawn, and photographed materials produced in encounters between western travelers and non-western communities. These travelers, who carried cameras and published photographs alongside their texts, reflected upon questions of knowledge, perception, and memory in order to interrogate the role of technologies of inscription. I argue that each traveler developed a distinct concept of “evidence,” which do not entirely conform to an empirical logic of the encounter. Second, I consider the afterlives of the material traces of these encounters. I investigate these texts and images were woven into narratives that build historical, legal and humanitarian, and anthropological arguments that marked the formation of a transnational imaginary of the Amazon or the sertão. Finally, I suggest ways in which the trajectories of these materials conflict with political or intellectual projects at stake. More specifically, I read these “official” narratives alongside the photographs cropped, reframed, or forgotten in the archive.
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01hm50tv13h
Alternate format: The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: http://catalog.princeton.edu/
Type of Material: Academic dissertations (Ph.D.)
Language: en
Appears in Collections:Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Cultures

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