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9781469671260 Academic Inspection Copy

Guarana

How Brazil Embraced the World's Most Caffeine-Rich Plant
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In this sweeping chronicle of guarana-a glossy-leaved Amazonian vine packed with more caffeine than any other plant-Seth Garfield develops a wide-ranging approach to the history of Brazil itself. The story begins with guarana as the pre-Columbian cultivar of the Satere-Mawe people in the Lower Amazon region, where it figured centrally in the Indigenous nation's origin stories, dietary regimes, and communal ceremonies. During subsequent centuries of Portuguese colonialism and Brazilian rule, guarana was reformulated by settlers, scientists, folklorists, food technologists, and marketers. Whether in search of pleasure, profits, professional distinction, or patriotic markers, promoters imparted new meanings and uses to guarana. Today, it is the namesake ingredient of a multibillion-dollar soft drink industry and a beloved national symbol. Guarana's journey elucidates human impacts on Amazonian ecosystems; the circulation of knowledge, goods, and power; and the promise of modernity in Latin America's largest nation. For Garfield, the beverage's cross-cultural history reveals not only the structuring of inequalities in Brazil but also the mythmaking and ordering of social practices that constitute so-called traditional and modern societies.
Seth Garfield is professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin. His most recent book is In Search of the Amazon.
Seth Garfield's Guarana is well written and finely researched, and its bibliography is a treasure trove of little-known historical material. I thoroughly recommend this book to the readers."--Economic Botany A deeply researched narrative that illuminates so much more than one seems to see at first glance. . . . Garfield situates guarana within a series of different systems of knowledge and culture over a period that stretches from the earliest moments of colonization of the Amazon to the present. "--H-LatAm A luminous social biography of a single Amazonian fruit. Historian Seth Garfield reinvigorates the abiding relevance of the history of commodities as an entry point into Latin American history. . . . Elegantly written and immensely interdisciplinary."--Not Even Past A powerful, evocative book, a work of deep scholarship . . . It offers an understanding of how a native plant is connected to so much else."--Journal of Latin American Geography Seth Garfield's book fills a gap in the historiography by providing the first thorough study on the history of guarana. . . . [This is a] complex, well-connected, superb book, which will be of interest to a variety of scholars from various disciplines including those who are non-Brazilianists."--The Americas This is an impressive scholarly achievement and a significant contribution to the historiography. . . . The book is at turns cultural history, agricultural history, environmental history, and history of science; each new analytical lens is elaborated in detail and carefully contextualized."--H-Environment
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