Landscape and Letterscape in Early Colonial Brazil Cover Image

Landscape and Letterscape in Early Colonial Brazil
Landscape and Letterscape in Early Colonial Brazil

Author(s): Diogo Carvalho Cabral
Subject(s): History, Human Geography
Published by: Polskie Towarzystwo Historyczne
Keywords: early-modern colonialism;alphabetic literacy;Portuguese Brazil;Tupi groups

Summary/Abstract: This essay discusses alphabetic literacy’s geographic implications to the early-modern European colonization of the Americas, especially of those regions inhabited by tribal groups with no writing systems. Based on the understanding that any written text is as much a folding of as an unfolding in the world – a compressed representation of “concrete” environments and a schema for perceiving and dealing with them –, it is proposed that colonial processes be conceptualized from the perspective of landscape-letterscape dialectics. Through the study of early Brazil, it is shown how Portuguese written procedures and materials rearranged the native socio-ecological fabric through encrypted (i.e., non-transparent to native illiterate people) textual projections – both outward-bound and inward-bound or from the text to the world and vice-versa – of a European-like would-be world. As physical objects, most of these texts circulated through a network of earthbound places that were territorially inaccessible to indigenous people. This colonial spatialization of alphabetic practices overwrote native landscapes and livelihoods while at the same time producing the legibility of the novel human geographies that were being created.

  • Issue Year: 2018
  • Issue No: 6
  • Page Range: 7-27
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: English
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