Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2006
Abstract
While in New Spain from 1803 to 1804, Alexander von Humboldt interacted with some of its landscapes and the texts that represented them. Analysis of those interactions regarding the Basin of Mexico and the Gulf lowlands demonstrates what purely text-based studies of the production of places cannot: The contrasting landscape elements and patterns that had emerged over millennia during precolonial times in those two places, their relative degrees of depopulation during the colonial era, and the relative degrees of rigor Humboldt applied to interacting with the resulting landscapes and the texts that represented them greatly affected his representations of those places in his 1811 Essai politique sur le royaume de la Nouvelle-Espagne. His representations of the precolonial Basin of Mexico as productively developed and of the precolonial Gulf lowlands as pristine have influenced the transforma- tions of those places in the two centuries after New Spain became the Mexican republic through its wars of independence (1810-1821).
Pages
361-381
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Geographical Review
Volume
96
Number
36
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Recommended Citation
Sluyter, A. (2006). Humboldt's Mexican Texts and Landscapes. Geographical Review, 96 Retrieved from https://repository.lsu.edu/geoanth_pubs/36