Related Papers
Thesis (THE SIXTEENTH-CENTURY CORPUS OF THE PORTUGUESE COLONIZERS OF BRAZIL: AN APPROACH IN TERMS OF STYLES OF THINKING)
Alessandro Zir
There has been substantial work done interpreting the descriptive texts from the early-modern encounters of Portuguese colonizers in Brazil. The interpretations have had major difficulty with significant elements of the texts, which the interpreters found strange from the perspective of their particular contexts. For the most part, they dismiss these elements. It is suggested here that these elements are evidence of a specific style of thinking for coming to terms with nature in the New World. The point is not that the corpus in question can be reduced to this style of thinking. There might be other styles to be identified in the corpus. But this style of thinking gives shape to the corpus to a considerable measure. Moreover, it enables one to make sense of the most strange and puzzling passages of the corpus, such as the following one, describing a " water tree " supposedly found at the time in Bahia: " in its branches it has holes of the length of an arm, which are full of water… the origin of which is unknown… and it happens that 100 souls come to it, and they are all protected, [being able to] drink and wash everything they want, and there is never water shortage " (Cardim, 1925: 67)...
Shifting the Compass: Pluricontinental Connections in Dutch Colonial and Postcolonial Literature
Writing to Comprehend Dutch Brazil: Joannes de Laet’s Iaerlyck Verhael
2013 •
Britt Dams
The Legacy of Dutch Brazil, edited by Michiel van Groesen, Cambridge University Press
Mythologies of Dutch Brazil
2014 •
Joan-Pau Rubiés
Itinerario
Evaldo Cabral de Mello, De Braziliaanse Affaire: Portugal, de Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden en Noord-Oost Brazilië, 1641–1669. Translated by Catherine Barel. Third Edition. Zutphen: Walburg Pers, 2005. 222 pp. ISBN: 90-5730-345-0
2005 •
Maurits Ebben
New Holland Foundation
Dutch Colonial fortifications in Brazil (1600-1654). Preliminary inventory. Historical research in Spain. Contributions to the Atlas of Dutch Brazil. New Holland Foundation. (ISBN: 978-94-90246-14-3)
2015 •
José Manuel Santos
This report has been made to answer the question: which are the sources in the Spanish Archives for the study of the Dutch presence in Brazil in the seventeenth century? Of these sources, which ones are relevant for the study of the Dutch fortifications? Our methodology has been to study the different guides to the sources for the different archives in Spain, visiting some of them, and trying to be as comprehensive as possible.
Historical Wrting About Brazil, 1500-1800
Neil L. Whitehead
Brazil in Central and Northwestern European History
Dr. Horst Pietschmann - - - - - - - - - - - Pietschmann
Unpublished document written in support of the co-financiation of the publication of a catalogue of Dutch documents existing in archives of the Netherlands on Brazil and to be edited in Brazil, referring to the parts of Brazil under Dutch government during the XVIIth century.
World History Bulletin
"A True Liberation": Braudel, The Mediterranean, and Stories of Dutch Brazil
2017 •
Suzanne Marie Litrel
The Tapuia of Norteastern Brazil in Dutch sources 1628-1648
2023 •
Martijn M van den Bel
Review Essay Itinerario: M. van Groesen (ed), The Legacy of Dutch Brazil (2014); J. Jacobs & L. H. Roper (eds), The Worlds of the Seventeenth-Century Hudson Valley (2014); G. Oostindie and J. V. Roitman (eds), Dutch Atlantic Connections (2014)
2015 •
Joris van den Tol
Writing a history about the Dutch Atlantic used to be easy. First, one would pick and choose one or more quotes from either “the Dutch were not very important in that part of the world”, talking about a Dutch Atlantic “makes as much sense as ‘Dutch Asia’ or the ‘Dutch Mediterranean’”, “the Dutch . . . were not until the nineteenth century an imperial power in any meaningful sense of the word”, or “there was no such thing as the Dutch Atlantic”. Such positions make sense since the territorial claims by the Dutch were, except for short-lived adventures in North America and Brazil, relatively modest. The next step in writing a history of the Dutch Atlantic would be to carefully nuance or disagree with this view in order to position oneself vis-à-vis the existing literature. After almost two decades of such “revisionist” contributions, it is no longer possible to apply this tactic. In 2014, three edited volumes relegated past the orthodox views to the wastepaper basket. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0165115315000522