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Introduction Michiel van Groesen; Part I. The Geopolitical Legacy: 1. The geopolitical impact of Dutch Brazil on the Western Hemisphere Wim Klooster; 2. Looking for a new Brazil: crisis and rebirth in the Atlantic world after the fall of Pernambuco Stuart B. Schwartz; 3. From Dutch allies to Portuguese vassals: indigenous peoples in the aftermath of Dutch Brazil Mark Meuwese; 4. From Brazil to West Africa: Dutch-Portuguese rivalry, gold smuggling, and African politics in the Bight of Benin Roquinaldo Ferreira; Part II. The Cultural Legacy: 5. Global connections: Johan Maurits of Nassau-Siegen's collection of curiosities Mariana Françozo; 6. A less Christian Atlantic: the legacy of Dutch tolerance in Brazil Evan Haefeli; 7. How Dutch Brazil affects your emotions: the Antwerp Jesuit Cornelius Hazart on early colonial Brazil Johan Verberckmoes; 8. Beyond Brazilian nature: the editorial itineraries of Marcgraf and Piso's Historia Naturalis Brasiliae Neil Safier; 9. Dutch Brazil and the making of free-trade ideology Arthur Weststeijn; Part III. The National Legacy: From Memory to Mythology: 10. Heroic memories: admirals of Dutch Brazil in the rise of Dutch national consciousness Michiel van Groesen; 11. Who owns Frans Post?: Collecting Frans Post's Brazilian landscapes Rebecca Parker Brienen; 12. Visual impact: the long legacy of the artists of Dutch Brazil Julie Berger Hochstrasser; Epilogue: mythologies of Dutch Brazil Joan-Pau Rubiés.
Argues that Dutch Brazil is integral to Atlantic history and made an impact well beyond the colonial and national narratives in the Netherlands and Brazil.
Michiel van Groesen is Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University of Amsterdam.
'Dutch Brazil has languished at historiographic margins,
self-contained and poorly integrated into the history of Latin
America or the Atlantic world. This exemplary interdisciplinary
collection recasts the history of this fascinating time and place.
With its meticulous scholarship, Atlantic perspective,
heterogeneous chapters, and lengthy bibliography, The Legacy of
Dutch Brazil is a timely book of lasting value.' Alison Games,
Georgetown University
'During their seventeenth-century golden age, the Dutch presided
for a time over a wholly exceptional colonial society based on the
region around Recife in northeast Brazil, which has almost
invariably been underestimated by general historians of the early
modern Atlantic world. This is because that society lasted barely
thirty years from 1624 to 1654. But despite its short duration,
Dutch Brazil left an enduring legacy and was remarkable in many
ways, and not least for the unrivaled degree of religious mixing
and toleration that it permitted, allowing a coexistence of
churches, religions, and cultural systems that was then unique in
the Americas. Expertly introduced and edited by Michiel van
Groesen, this thoroughly up-to-date collection of essays containing
much that is new and unfamiliar provides the best overview we have
of a legacy that is increasingly coming to be valued at its true
worth.' Jonathan Israel, Institute for Advanced Studies,
Princeton
'… provocatively written, expertly edited papers … highly
recommended …' Choice
'The Legacy of Dutch Brazil tries to answer questions about why
Brazil persisted in the colonial imagination and how its
mythologies emerged in different times, shapes and places … The
book tells the compelling story of an Atlantic and European legacy
of the West India Company colony in Brazil. It is clearly
positioned within a historiographical lacuna of neglected cultural
connections and that of Dutch Brazil in particular.' Joris van den
Tol, Itinerario
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