ARAGÃO, É. A.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6856653888182196; ARAGÃO, Éverton Alves.
Abstract:
The Brazilian Atlantic Forest after 1500 was the stage of an environmental crisis that went
beyond the dense forest and reached us through official documentation. In this plot, man and
nature play a leading role in different relationships – of destruction, but also of planning and
conservation. The tree symbol of the nation, it is also the tree that represents the widely
disseminated destruction of our forests. Therefore, the present work dialogues with the research
areas of Environmental History, Science and the Transit of Plants. Primarily inspired by the
"connected histories" approach, from the Indian historian Sanjay Subrahmanyam, but also from
Serge Gruzinski's reflections, we analyze the webs and historical connections made through the
cutting, shipping and trade of brazilwood, with the objective of understanding the different
socio-environmental relationships between different ethnic groups. Therefore, we reflect on the
concepts of landscape, transit of plants and imperial connections from the perspective of Simon
Schama, Lorelai Kury and João Fragoso, respectively. Furthermore, throughout the chapters,
we approach topics such as the role of brazilwood in different areas of studies, the theme of
brazilwood in brazilian historiography, and the relation between nature and society. Lastly, we
consider that there is more than sap in sapwood, and brazilin in the core of brazilwood – there
is history(ies). They are stories that represent dialogues; dialogues that often intensify human
history itself.