Unsettling Agribusiness

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Unsettling Agribusiness

Indigenous Protests and Land Conflict in Brazil

LaShandra Sullivan

232 pages
9 photographs, 1 map, 1 table, index

Hardcover

June 2023

978-1-4962-0838-5

$60.00 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

June 2023

978-1-4962-3601-2

$60.00 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

June 2023

978-1-4962-3602-9

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About the Book

In the last half century Brazil’s rural economy has developed profitable soy and sugarcane plantations, causing mass displacement of rural inhabitants, deforestation, casualization of labor, and reorganization of politics. Since the early 2000s Indigenous peoples have protested the taking of their land and transformed terms provided by state institutions, NGOs, agribusiness firms, and myriad local middlemen toward their material survival, leading to significant violence from third-party security forces. Guarani protestors have confronted these armed security forces through a form of life-or-death political theater and spectacle on the sides of highways, while squatters have viscerally disturbed the landscape and enlivened long-standing genocide and settler-colonial violence.

In Unsettling Agribusiness LaShandra Sullivan analyzes the transformations in rural life wrought by the internationalization of agribusiness and contests over land rights by Indigenous social movements. The protest camps, by reclaiming the countryside as a site of residence and not merely one of abstract maximized agribusiness production, call into question the meanings and stakes of Brazil’s political model. The squatter protests complicated federal attempts to balance land reform with economic development imperatives and imperiled existing constellations of political and economic order. Unsettling Agribusiness encompasses the multiple scales of the conflict, maintaining within the same frame of analysis the unique operations of daily life in the protest camps and the larger political, economic, and social networks of pan-Indigenous activism and transnational agribusiness complexes of which they are a part. Sullivan speaks to the urgent need to link the dual preoccupations of multi-scalar political-economic change and the ethno-racial terms in which Indigenous people in Brazil live today.

Author Bio

LaShandra Sullivan is an associate professor of anthropology at Reed College.

Praise

Unsettling Agribusiness is a thoroughly researched and often gripping ethnography filled with sophisticated conceptual thinking that intervenes in provocative ways into some of the most contentious debates in the contemporary anthropology of Brazil. LaShandra Sullivan convincingly charts a course beyond the poles of reification and erasure of difference that are far too common in the literature. The book’s ethnography and arguments are important, not only for anthropology, but for understanding the politics of ethnicity, race, inequality, nature, development, and governance in contemporary Brazil. These topics are crucial to the future in an era of climate change, and this book provides an excellent window into their complex interactions.”—Sean T. Mitchell, author of Constellations of Inequality: Space, Race, and Utopia in Brazil

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Ethnoracial Politics of Agribusiness in Dourados
2. Floating Labor in a Bind
3. The Protest Camp as a Political Form
4. Agribusiness Rearrangements of Space
5. Mobilizing against Forced Transience
6. The Space to Be
Notes
Bibliography
Index
 
 
 

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