Go-Betweens and the Colonization of Brazil
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Table of Contents

  • A Note on Spelling and Citation
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1. Go-betweens
  • 2. Encounter
  • 3. Possession
  • 4. Conversion
  • 5. Biology
  • 6. Slavery
  • 7. Resistance
  • 8. Power
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Promotional Information

An historically rich account of how "go-betweens" - individuals who could bridge indigenous and European cultures - helped shape Brazilian society in the sixteenth century

Promotional Information

An historically rich account of how "go-betweens" - individuals who could bridge indigenous and European cultures - helped shape Brazilian society in the sixteenth century

About the Author

Alida Metcalf is Harris Masterson, Jr. Professor of History at Rice University.

Reviews

"Based on a broad array of sources, including extensive archival research, this book presents a provocatively new interpretation of indigenous-European relations in Portuguese America, as they unfolded over the course of the sixteenth century... The topic is fascinating and the sources extremely rich and suggestive." --John Monteiro, Anthropology Department, UNICAMP, Brazil, and Visiting Professor of History, Harvard University

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