Amazônía: Gta Papers 9Santiago del Hierro, Johanna Just, Ciro Miguel
The Amazon’s ecology and history of inhabitation are deeply intertwined with the natural world. In this issue of gta papers, researchers from diverse backgrounds lend their voices to challenge conventional narratives of colonization and modernization. By highlighting the importance of Indigenous knowledge and the pressing need for ecological reconciliation, it advocates for an intercultural understanding that respects and integrates myriad ways of being within this vast region. Contributions range from the theoretical to the practical, including analyses of the forest’s architectural or metropolitan qualities and Indigenous cosmologies to urge plural conceptions of one of the world’s most vital ecological and cultural landscapes.
Edited by Santiago del Hierro, Johanna Just, and Ciro Miguel. Contributions by Ricardo Avella, Tomás Bartoletti, Thiago Benucci, Xhulio Binjaku, Oscar Bressane, Angelo Bucci, Wellington Cançado, Marcos Cereto, Hernando Chindoy Chindoy, Martín Cobas, Ana María Durán Calisto, Ana Maria R. Gomes, Vanessa Grossman, Ailton Krenak, Camila Medina Novoa, Roberto Monte-Mór, Isabela Ono, María Clara Sharupi Juá, Tirinkias Teresa Shiki, Paulo Tavares, Uxía Varela, Sérgio Yanomami. Designed by büro uebele.