A World Without Hunger: Josué de Castro and the History of Geography
An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library as part of the Opening the Future project with COPIM. Drawing on the rich personal archive of the geographer Josué de Castro, this book tells a new history of geography by following one o...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | An Open Access edition of this book is available on the
Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library as part of
the Opening the Future project with COPIM. Drawing on the
rich personal archive of the geographer Josué de Castro, this book
tells a new history of geography by following one of the twentieth
century's most influential and creative Brazilian intellectuals
from the estuarine city of Recife to the halls of the UN, the
chambers of Brasília, and exile amid the political fervour of the
universities of Paris in 1968. This is the first English language
book on the absorbing life of Josué de Castro. It follows modern
anticolonial geographical thought in formation, re-reading Castro's
metabolic, humanist geography as the anchor of a utopian practice
of freedom: the demand for a world without hunger. Starting from
Castro's life and work, the book offers new takes on the history of
nutrition, translation in geography, Brazilian modernist art and
practice in post-war internationalism, the radical geographical
intellectual, the problem of the region in the Brazilian Northeast,
and the birth of political ecology and critical environmental
thought. At once a biographical intellectual history and a work of
geographical theory, this innovative book tells the story of 20th
century geography from a new angle and in new company. |
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DOI: | 10.3828/9781802077209 |