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  • Bananas, Art, and Visual Culture in Latin America and the Caribbean

    Bananas, Art, and Visual Culture in Latin America and the Caribbean by Serrano Ortiz de Solórzano, Blanca; Solano Roa, Juanita;

    Series: Routledge Research in Art History;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 155.00
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        74 051 Ft (70 525 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    66 646 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher Routledge
    • Date of Publication 1 June 2026

    • ISBN 9781041216506
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages262 pages
    • Size 246x174 mm
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 27 Illustrations, black & white; 20 Illustrations, color; 27 Halftones, black & white; 20 Halftones, color
    • 700

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    Short description:

    Via a diverse collection of essays in the history of art of the Americas, this book explores the cultural, political and environmental legacy of bananas from viceregal painting and 19th century photography to contemporary Latinx and Caribbean Art. This book will appeal to scholars of art history and visual culture.

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    Long description:

    Via a diverse collection of essays in the history of art of the Americas, this book explores the cultural, political and environmental legacy of bananas from viceregal painting and 19th century photography to contemporary Latinx and Caribbean Art.


    Through sixteen original essays by leading art historians, this anthology traces the banana's remarkable journey from colonial still lifes to contemporary installations. The collection examines how artists have deployed this tropical fruit to challenge imperial narratives, visualize labor struggles, and reclaim cultural identities. Expanding on the award-winning digital humanities project Banana Craze, this volume presents a comprehensive analysis of banana imagery across diverse media—religious murals, archival photographs, avant-garde paintings, and performance art. Each chapter illuminates how artists from Latin America, the Caribbean, and their diasporas have transformed this ubiquitous commodity into a complex visual metaphor that speaks to histories of exploitation, ecological devastation, and artistic resistance.


    This book will appeal to scholars of art history, visual culture, Latin American and Caribbean studies, postcolonial theory, and environmental humanities.


    Chapter 1 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

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    Table of Contents:

    1. Banana, Banana, Banana  Section I: From Ornament to Nourishment: Painting Bananas in the American Viceroyalties  2. Beyond the Fruit Bowl: Bananas Described and Painted in the American Viceroyalties  3. Most Delicate: Representations of Musaceae in Vicente Albán’s Quito Series  Section II: Picturing Bananas, Picturing the Nation: Constructing National Identities During the Long Nineteenth Century  4. La mancha ‘e plátano: the Representations of Plantains in Puerto Rico during the long 19th century  5. Dangerous to the Unacclimated: Bananas in U.S. investor Manuals on Cuba after the Spanish American War  Section III: The Long Shadow of the Banana Empire: Traces of the United Fruit Company’s Photographic Archive  6. Archive Matter: Upheavals and Resurgent Photographic Archive  7. Making the (Archival) Violence of the United Fruit Company Visible  Section IV: Unpeeling Tropical Myths: Race, Gender, and Spirituality in Banana Imagery (1940s–1980s)  8. The Social, the Spectral, and the Sensual: The Gastropoetics of the Banana in the Ofrendas of Olga Costa and Elena Climent  9. Points North: Signifying Capacities of Bananas in the Haitian Diaspora  Section V: Beyond the Banana Republic: Resisting Authoritarianism and Violence From Central America to Brazil  10. Yes, we have Bananas: Art and Politics in the 1960s Brazil  11. Un-Stilling Still Lives: A History of Art and Bananas in the Work of Moisés Barrios  12. Seeing Red in Yellow: The Gender Politics of the Blood Banana in Central American Art  Section VI: Toxic Harvest: The Environmental Cost of Banana Plantocracies in Contemporary Art  13. The Forms of Extraction: Banana Plantations, Modernization and Social Unrest in Ecuador  14. Colonial Vision: Bananas, Gold, and the Extractive View in the Art of Leandro Katz and María José Argenzio  Section VII: Embodied Politics and the Banana Imaginary: Challenging Neocolonial Fantasies in Contemporary Art  15. Bananas and Blackness: Contemporary Conflations in the work of Liliana Angulo Cortés and Gonzalo Fuenmayor  16. Plátano Power: Subversion and Swagger in Latinx/e Art


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