Article ID: CBB001421605

Bien Manger, Bien Mangé: Edible Reciprocity in Jean de Léry's Histoire d'un voyage faict en la terre du Brésil (2014)

unapi

In his Histoire d'un voyage faict en la terre du Brésil [History of a voyage to the land of Brazil], the French Protestant Jean de Léry gives an ambivalent account of his journey: he recalls with loathing the violent strangeness of the New World, but he also pines for Brazil and the indigenous Tupinamba hosts that he left behind. Drawing on a framework of critical animal studies, this essay reads Léry's early modern travel narrative as an exploratory alternative to human exceptionalism, particularly to the complex of colonial, masculine, and carnivorous forces of domination that bolster humanist subjectivity (what Derrida calls carno-phallogocentrism). In Léry's narration, existing alimentary categories constantly threaten to collapse; the categories of eating subject and eaten object are perpetually unfixed. This essay traces the fears and desires that accompany the radical interchangeability of eater and eaten. Léry's text proposes an unsettled, unsettling subjectivity that is fascinated by its own vulnerability to consumption and attentive to the horror and pleasure of all manner of eating practices. This alternative subjectivity suggests the basis of an ethical project akin to Derrida's rule of “eating well”---a practice of openness to reciprocal encounter with both human and animal others.

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Authors & Contributors
Vasko, Timothy Bowers
Cristina Brito
Schirrmeister, Albert
Dent, Rosanna
Nina Vieira
Schlelein, Stefan
Journals
International Journal of Maritime History (IJMH)
Journal of Early Modern History
Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies
History of the Human Sciences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Historical Research: The Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research
Publishers
Ashgate
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick
University of Pennsylvania Press
Pickering & Chatto
Oxford University Press
de Gruyter
Concepts
Colonialism
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Travel; exploration
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
Science and culture
Science and literature
People
Maybury-Lewis, David
Zilsel, Edgar
Tasso, Torquato
Shaler, William
Shakespeare, William
Rugendas, Johann Moritz
Time Periods
Early modern
16th century
Renaissance
19th century
18th century
17th century
Places
Europe
Brazil
Americas
North America
Mediterranean region
Latin America
Institutions
Pitt Rivers Museum (University of Oxford)
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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