Preface: The Amazon Rubber Boom, Tapping into the Past 1. Requiem for the Amazon Rubber Boom 2. This Substance Called Rubber: Hevea and Its Relations 3. Anthropological Rubber in the Amazon 4. Postcards from El Dorado: an overview of historical accounts of the rubber industry 5. Embedded Tropes and the Shift of Time 6. Failure as a Stage of Modernization, Part one: Narratives of failure 7. Failure as a Stage of Modernization, Part two: Modernity redux, the failure of Fordlândia 8. After the Wild Frontier 9. The Melancholy and the Modern 10. Rubber in London 11. Concluding Comments
Stephen L. Nugent is Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK.
“As Sidney Mintz does with sugar, Nugent does with rubber. This is
the story of a product tapped by Amazonian labourers that led to
industrial expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Illustrated with contemporary images, adverts and maps,
the study is a treasure chest of a book. It reminds the reader of
the value of an historical anthropology to examine the connections
between workers, traders, capitalists, scientists and consumers in
different corners of the globe. Yet this book is fundamentally
about the Amazon, its people and their contribution to the modern
world.”
Mark Harris, University of St Andrews, UK“Meticulously researched
and rigorously argued, this book rethinks the connections between
extraction of natural rubber by peasant producers in Amazonia,
international trading, and capitalist industry in London. Bringing
local production relations into view underpins a powerful critique
of rubber “boom and bust” thinking and continuing naturalization of
Amazonian “development challenges.””
John Gledhill, The University of Manchester, UK
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