“Faces Drawn in the Sand”: A Rescue Project of Native Peoples' Photographs Stored at the Museum of La Plata, Argentina

2010 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Podgorny ◽  
Tatiana Kelly
Keyword(s):  
2003 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 497-512
Author(s):  
Stuart B. Schwartz ◽  
Frank Salomon

Deux notes critiquesdeThe Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas, vol. III,South America[CHNPA] ont été publiées dans lesAnnales:l’une, de Luiz Felipe de Alencastro, relative à l’histoire des peuples natifs du Brésil; l’autre, de Carmen Bernand, portant sur les hautes terres d’Amérique du Sud et le Rio de la Plata. Nous ne dirons (quasiment) rien des commentaires de L. F. de Alencastro : ses critiques et remarques offrent une autre interprétation que celle présentée dans les chapitres consacrés au Brésil. Ainsi notre propos s’adressera-t-il uniquement au point de vue critique de C. Bernand, puisque son article conteste les orientations de l’entreprise éditoriale que nous avons dirigée, offrant une vision alternative de l’américanisme qui y est présenté, qu’elle complète par des perspectives de recherche.


Author(s):  
Jeffrey Alan Erbig

The introduction considers how autonomous Indigenous peoples in South America responded to the drawing of interimperial borders through their lands. Bringing together borderlands studies and histories of cartography, it argues that imperial border making transformed regional territorialities precisely because Native peoples engaged such efforts. In the Río de la Plata, Portugal’s and Spain’s invention of a border was an attempt to circumvent the territorial authority exercised by Indigenous peoples known Charrúas and Minuanes, whom members of the Luso-Hispanic boundary commissions routinely evaded as they traversed the region. Native responses to subsequent colonial efforts to materialize the imagined border derived from their own territorialities, and some Indigenous leaders leveraged imperial border making to expand their own kinship, tributary, and trading networks. Drawing upon hundreds of fragmented manuscripts dispersed in archives across three continents and representing them together via geographic information systems (GIS), this introduction centers Native ground and actions in the history of the border.


2016 ◽  
Vol 68 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 243-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
EM de Jesus ◽  
RP da Rocha ◽  
MS Reboita ◽  
M Llopart ◽  
LM Mosso Dutra ◽  
...  

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