- University of North Carolina Press
Creatures of Fashion: Animals, Global Markets, and the Transformation of Patagonia
Key Metrics
- John Soluri
- University of North Carolina Press
- Paperback
- 9781469675725
- 9.25 X 6.12 X 1 inches
- -
- Social Science > Ethnic Studies - Caribbean & Latin American Studies
- English
Book Description
From the nineteenth-century rise of commercial hunting to twentieth-century sheep ranching to contemporary conservation-based tourism, Soluri's narrative explains how struggles for control over the production of commodities and the reproduction of animals drove the social and environmental changes that tied Patagonia to global markets, empires, and wildlife conservation movements. By exposing seams in national territories and global markets knit together by force, this book provides perspectives and analyses vital for understanding contemporary conflicts over mass consumption, the conservation of biodiversity, and struggles for environmental justice in Patagonia and beyond.
Author Bio
Professor Soluri's research and teaching explore the relationship between social and environmental change in Latin America. He is currently completing a book project, Refashioning Patagonia: Animals, International Markets, and the Particularity of Place, that examines how the commodification of wild and domesticated animals for textiles transformed Patagonia.
He recently collaborated with colleagues in Colombia and Brazil to edit a new synthesis of modern Latin American environmental history. In addition, the University of Texas will be publishing a second edition of his award-winning book, Banana Cultures, in 2021.
During the 2019-20 academic year, he co-convened an A.W. Mellon funded Sawyer Seminar, “Bread and Water: Access, Belonging, and Environmental Justice in the City.” He directed Matthew Nielsen’s dissertation “Unruliness at the Margins: Environment and Politics in the Lower Orinoco River Basin, 1600s - 1700” (2019). His current graduate student,
Francisco Javier Bonilla, is working on a history of water infrastructure in twentieth-century Panama. Beyond the academy, Soluri chairs the Board of Directors of Building New Hope, a Pittsburgh-based not-for-profit that partners with Central Americans to promote youth education and sustainable agriculture.
- Education
- Ph.D.: University of Michigan, 1998
Source: Carnegie Mellon University
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