Of Cannibals and Witches: Monstrosity and Capitalism at the Onset of Colonial Visual Culture

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.14720

Keywords:

cannibalism, hexes, monstrosity, capitalism, Theodor de Bry, Brazilian visual culture

Abstract

This article provides preliminary insight into the creation of colonial visual culture. Using visual examples, the author shows how the encounter between European and Amerindian was, at first, apparently deprived of moral judgement, later being increasingly signified through moral and physical monstrosity, especially the female body, which served as an apparatus to assure colonial dominion. Looking mostly at the works of Liègeois artist Theodor de Bry, the author shows how increasing female protagonism may have helped to coin a proper visual culture that mirrored the development of productive force in early capitalism. Assuming that the European colonizer in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was still highly informed by Medieval culture, the author quickly retraces how the New World was imagined through cartography, following to the first depictions of the Amerindian and, finally, focusing on de Bry’s work and an argument on capitalism and how visual culture may help us understand its process.

Author Biography

Gustavo Racy, University of Antwerp

Born in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1988, Dr. Racy holds a B.A. in Social Sciences and in Philosophy. He was awarded his Ph.D. in Social Sciences in 2018 by the University of Antwerp, funded by the Ministry of Education of Brazil. His research interest is the intersection of historical materialism, visual culture, social anthropology, and the philosophy of social sciences. He is currently preparing a post-doc proposal on the role of images in contemporary culture, aiming to explore several cases, from analog to digital culture, from photography to ethnographic cinema, and from literature to cinematic adaptation. His latest research focused on the relation between the city, photography, and modernity, approached in two distinct 19th century cases: the works of Edmond Fierlants in Antwerp and of Militão Augusto de Azevedo in São Paulo. The study invites important considerations on the role of visual technology in the building of meaning for the social world, specifically in a materialist perspective. The study articulates the relation between economy and culture, knowledge, and power.

References

Angelico, Fra. Last Judgement. Gemäaldige Galerie Staatliche Mussen zu Berlin, 1395.

Anonymous. “Columbus disembarks at Hispaniola.” Letter from Columbus (Basel edition). Wikicommons. 1493.

Anonymous. “Couple of Indians from the New World.” Mundus Novus (Rostock edition), 1505.

Baldung, Hans. The Ages and Death. Oil on wood, 151 x 61 cm. Museo Nacional del Prado, 1541–1544.

Baumann, Thereza. B. “Imagens Do ‘Outro Mundo’: O Problema Da Alteridade Na Iconografia Cristã Ocidental.” América Em Tempo de Conquista, 1992, pp. 58–76.

Benjamin, Walter. The Arcades Project. The Belknap Press, 1999.

Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. Kindle edition. Penguin, 2008.

Boudichon, Jean. Les Quatre Etats de la Société. Painting with gold leaves, 16 x 12 cm. Beaux-Arts de Paris. Wikicommons, 16th century.

Braham, Persephone. “The Monstrous Caribbean.” The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous, Routledge, 2016, pp. 62–99.

Chicangana-Bayona, Yobenj. A. Imagens de Canibais e Selvagens do Novo Mundo. Do maravilhoso Medieval ao exótico colonial (Séculox XV-XVII). UNICAMP, 2017.

de Andrade, Oswald. Poesias Reunidas. Companhia das Letras, 2017.

de Bry, Theodor. Americae Tertia Pars. Iohannem Wechelum, Frankfurt, 1592a.

de Bry, Theodor. “Hans Staden watches the preparation of a victim’s corpse.” Americae Tertia Pars. Iohannem Wechelum, Frankfurt, 1592b.

de Bry, Theodor. “Porridge Preparation.” Americae Tertia Pars. Iohannem Wechelum, Frankfurt, 1592c.

de Bry, Theodor. Americae Pars Quarta. Ioannis Feyerabend, 1594a.

de Bry, Theodor. “Cumana Amerindian bringing gifts to the prefect.” Ioannis Feyerabend, 1594b.

Dürer, Albrecht. The Hex. Woodcut, 11,4 x 7,1 cm. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, c.1500.

Federici, Silvia. Calibano e la Strega. Le donne, il corpo e l’accumulazione originaria. Mimesis, 2004.

Horkheimer, Max. Les Débuts de la Philosophie Bourgeoise de l’Histoire. Translated by D. Authier. Petite Bibliothèque Payot, 2010.

Lemire, Laurent. Monstres et Monstruosités. Éditions Perrin.

Marx, Kark. Capital. A Critique of Political Economy. Digireads, 2011.

Downloads

Published

2022-12-31

How to Cite

Racy, G. (2022). Of Cannibals and Witches: Monstrosity and Capitalism at the Onset of Colonial Visual Culture. Review of International American Studies, 15(2), 71–94. https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.14720