Aesthetic and Design of Latin American Technology

Please set your timezone at https://www.chstm.org/user

Consortium Respectful Behavior Policy

Participants at Consortium activities will treat each other with respect and consideration to create a collegial, inclusive, and professional environment that is free from any form of discrimination, harassment, or retaliation.

Participants will avoid any inappropriate actions or statements based on individual characteristics such as age, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, nationality, political affiliation, ability status, educational background, or any other characteristic protected by law. Disruptive or harassing behavior of any kind will not be tolerated. Harassment includes but is not limited to inappropriate or intimidating behavior and language, unwelcome jokes or comments, unwanted touching or attention, offensive images, photography without permission, and stalking.

Participants may send reports or concerns about violations of this policy to conduct@chstm.org.

Upcoming Meetings

There are no currently scheduled upcoming events.


Past Meetings

  • January 12, 2023

    Presenter 1: Francisco G. Tijerina Martínez, Washington University in St. Louis, "From the Cosmopolitan to the Planetary: Ecological Aesthetics in Contemporary Mexican Haikus"

    • Summary: In the context of the intersection between our current climate crisis and late capitalism, I explore the cultural significance of minimalist poetry, specifically haikus, in the Mexican context of the last century. Drawing from Verónica Gerber Bicecci’s Otro día… (poemas sintéticos), a contemporary response to José Juan Tablada’s Un día… (poemas sintéticos), I seek out how ongoing aesthetic practices use digital tools, such as search engines and the images sent on the Voyager in the 70s, as a methodology to critique the trinomial globalization-capitalism-anthropocentrism. By analyzing both texts side by side, I aim to shed light on the social anxieties that inspired the publication of each book. On the one hand, we have José Juan Tablada as a key actor of cosmopolitanism who imported the haiku as a software update that reinvented poetry written in Spanish. While he was an already well-known member of the Mexican intelligentsia due to his participation in the Modernismo movement, this contribution helped consolidate him as a prominent figure of the Mexican avant-garde. On the other hand, we have Verónica Gerber Bicecci and her rewriting of Tablada’s text as a response not only to the myths of globalization and progress, but to the centrality of men and humans as the structural axis of our daily practices. By resignifying Tablada’s effort, which was linked to the goals of Latin American avant-garde movements and intellectuals, Gerber Bicecci manages to point not to a global perspective but to a planetary approach on literature and its cultural referents. The stress she puts onto these categories is, as Susan Stanford Friedman states, a work that encompasses “multitudes on a global grid of relational networks”, including those who have been obscured by the binary dichotomies like human/non-human and men/women.

     
    Presenter 2: Yohad Zacarias, University of Texas. Austin, "Aesthetics of lighting: Electrical substations and the extension of technology in Santiago de Chile. 1900-1940"

    • Summary: This presentation will explore the technological and urban consequences of the insertion of the first lighting and electrical substations in Santiago de Chile between 1900 and 1940. Based on the photography from the Electric Company historic Archive, newspapers, engineer's documents (Instituto de Ingenieros de Chile), and municipal and business sources (Actas de la Municipalidad de Santiago), the presentation will expose how the construction and development of the first lighting and electrical substations presented a series of material and aesthetic inequalities in the city. First, I will explore how the electrical substations –that fed the urban center– were installed in the periphery, where people only had gas or kerosene, evidencing a technological coexistence for the users. This technical expansion also led to an increase in the urban radius in previously considered peripheral and the beginning of the first techno-electrical experiences by the inhabitants of Santiago in public spaces. Depending on the location of their places of residence and how far –or not– from the center they were in, they experienced electricity in lighting and electrical substations in different ways. Finally, electrical supply networks, such as substations, exemplify that the inhabitants of sectors far from the urban radius did not have access to this electricity but did cohabit with electrical elements. Second, I will mention how, in the urban center, the electrification of public buildings and the installation of lighting with a modern decorative aesthetic purpose were chosen. In this first part, European and North American electrical transfers are evidenced in the urban space, showing a model of European extension but with North American touches in its materiality in the city. To conclude, my project's significance is evidence of the conformation of urban spaces with the extension of technology and its aesthetics in Santiago. Beyond the notions of progress and modernization associated with the insertion of electricity in cities, the article seeks to exemplify the specificities -and inequalities- of the urban ramification of this energy in Santiago and thus compare it with other Latin American capitals.

     


  • December 8, 2022

    Yovanna Pineda, University of Central Florida, "Caudillo Techno-Aesthetics"
    Moderator: Mikael Wolfe, Stanford University
    Abstract: Caudillo Techno-Aesthetics

    In this chapter, I examine the language and aesthetics that liberal elites used to promote their vision of the countryside as a space to advance science and technology before 1880.  They perceived an empty space requiring the use of science and technology to develop the land for the convenience of human settlers. The goal was to convert this space to productive land was for the international exchange of commodities.

    Drawing on archival materials, fieldwork, literature, traveler accounts, lore, and material culture, the elite developed a secular discourse of science and technology to be embedded in culture as common sense.  As prolific writers, thinkers, and administrators of the nineteenth century, Eduardo Olivera, Domingo Sarmiento, Estanislao Zeballos, and many others invented the language that would become the foundation for Argentina’s imagined destiny or future (el porvenir) as a civilized, modern nation. Their books were translated in different languages and widely read during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Their narrativity represented the logic of the period. These writers, along with others, created an identity for future generations to emulate, accept, or contest—and continue to reproduce or build upon. 


  • November 10, 2022

    Update: Owed to Hurricane Nicole arriving to central Florida on 11/10, Yovanna's talk will be rescheduled to December 8 and will present together with Diana Montaño. 

    • Presenter: Yovanna Pineda, University of Central Florida, "The Techno-aesthetics of rural men, farm machine repair, and climate in modern Argentina"
    • Discussant & Moderator: Diana J. Montano
    • Summary:  Rural men constructed different masculinities according to available physical, ecological, and social resources in the Argentine pampas region. During the twentieth century, the pampas was fertile land for crop farming, but was also prone to drought, excessive rains, and locust invasions. Different types of rural crises threatened men’s sense of masculinity as providers of the family farm, but it also offered opportunities to reshape and create new male identities. Farm communities developed an alternative narrative of rural spaces through the use, repair, and design of heavy farm machinery, in particular the combine harvester in the breadbasket region of Santa Fe province. Regardless of the task, men, engaged in manual labor on a farm or skilled in operating, designing or repairing machinery, were considered honorable men that could weather the adversities of the region’s challenging ecology. Drawing from archives, interviews, material culture, media studies, and ethnography, this proposed paper examines the intersection of ecology, repair, and masculine identity. The case study is from the communities in and near San Vicente, Santa Fe Province. It suggests that the town celebrated the harvester as a provider of family and became central to local male identity.
    • Related topic of the paper - https://repair.uni.lu/blog/spaces-of-design-repair-in-twentieth-century-...

  • October 13, 2022

    Thursday, 10/13/22, 1:00pm-2:30pm EDT 

    • Presenter--Lucas Erichsen, Instituto Nacional da Mata Atlântica - Brasil. Places for a first and last look: slaughterhouses, aesthetics, and technology in 19th Brazil.
    • Moderator: Yovanna Pineda 

    Abstract: 
    Eating animal meat is an act inseparable from human history, topologically dispersed, immersed in different historicity, and by a multitude of things: evolutionary, biological, gustatory, cultural, technological, aesthetic, economic, ecological, ethical, and perceptual elements. It was throughout the 19th century that public slaughterhouses emerged, places built by the State where killing animals for human consumption was regulated and conducted. Public slaughterhouses were also environments of constant interaction with the biophysical world and spaces constituted by the insertion and development of technologies, techniques, and gradual recognition of aesthetic elements that combined, aligned with the production and distribution of meat in Rio de Janeiro. 
    My essay explores three public slaughterhouses in Rio de Janeiro between 1854 and 1882. It was during this period that Rio de Janeiro underwent intense transformations and where we can find three public slaughterhouses in operation. Analyzing this junction illuminates how the State, conceptions of modernity, technology, and aesthetics played a significant role in the history of one of the activities most rooted in Brazilian culture and still neglected in Brazilian historiography, in the history of technology and the history of Brazil."    
     


  • September 8, 2022

    September 8, 2022 - First Round 

    • Presenter: Daniel Rebouças, Federal University of Bahia, Electric paths: chapters on the representations and social revolts of the electric tram (Salvador, Bahia, Brazil; 1897-1930)
    • Moderator: Yovanna Pineda

     
    Daniel Rebouças, Federal University of Bahia
    Short Bio: Daniel Rebouças is doctor of history at the Federal University of Bahia. He is a group member of "History of Humour in Brazil (1989-1930)/ University of São Paulo, Brazil" and authored The City of Bahia and the Electricity: A political, economic, human and cultural approach, from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century (Salvador: Caramurê Publishing house, 2018).
    Presentation title: Electric paths: chapters on the representations and social revolts of the electric tram (Salvador, Bahia, Brazil; 1897-1930)     
    Abstract: This essay examines the social and political relations between part of the population of Salvador, capital of the State of Bahia, and one of the greatest electrical inventions of the late 19th century: the electric streetcar. From the immense initial expectations around the new means of transport, the article shows how this invention came to be seen – and represented – as a synonym of violence, social oppression and a symbol of the nationalist struggle, in the 1930s. For this, I will mainly use series of photographs deposited in the Siemens Museum Archive, in Berlin, in the Neoenergia Archive, an electric energy company in Bahia and in the Public Archive of the State of Bahia.
     
    Documents are posted via our Google Drive. Please join the group to receive the link to the papers. If you have joined the group and still have not received the link, please email Yovanna Pineda at ypineda@ucf.edu to receive the link and/or paper. Thank you for your interest in our group! 
     


  • June 23, 2022

    October 13, 2022

    •  
    • Presenter #1-Yohad Zacarias, University of Texas. Austin. The aesthetics of lighting and electrical substations and the unequal extension of technology in urban space. Santiago de Chile. 1900-1930.
    • Presenter #2-Lucas Erichsen. Places for a first and last look: slaughterhouses, aesthetics, and technology in 19th Brazil

     


  • May 26, 2022

    Leida Fernandez-Prieto, Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, “Mute Witnesses:  Mapping the Meanings of the Images on the History of Cuban Agriculture”
     
     
    To be rescheduled for Fall 2022. David Pretel (on parental leave, sp22), Pompeu Fabra University, “Green Gold Modernity: Machines, Peonage and Henequen in Yucatan’s Gilded Age”
     
     


  • March 24, 2022

    #1-Lisa Munro, Independent Scholar. "Collecting Souvenirs Close to Home: The Politics of the Machine Production of Authentic Indigenous Aesthetics for Mass Consumption." She has published some of her work at https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17530350.2021.1977677
    #2-Peter Soland, Southeast Missouri State University, "Aerial Shots and Bomber Jackets: The Role of Aviation, Celebrity, and Cinema in Re-Imagining Latin America."

     


  • February 24, 2022

    #1-Fabián Prieto-Nanez, Virginia Tech, “The Invastion of Satellite Antennas. Autoconstruction and the Routes of Popular Electronics in Latin America"
    #2-Sonia Robles, University of Delaware, "Aural and material obstructions to technological development in Mexico"
     
     


  • January 27, 2022

    #1-David Dalton, UNC Charlotte, “Eduardo Urzaiz's novel, Eugenia and the Interface of aesthetics and science in constructing eugenics in postrevolutionary Mexico”
     
    #2-Lucas Izquierdo, Independent Scholar, “Analogue Technologies: the novel genre’s virtualization of Peru in Arguedas, Vargas Llosa & Roncagliolo”
     


Group Conveners

  • Dmontano's picture

    Diana J. Montaño

    Diana J. Montaño is Assistant Professor at Washington University in St. Louis. Her teaching and research interests broadly include the construction of modern Latin American societies with a focus on technology and its relationship to nationalism, everyday life, and domesticity. Her first book Electrifying Mexico looks at how "electrifying agents" (businessmen, salespersons, inventors, doctors, housewives, maids, and domestic advisors) used electricity, both symbolically and physically, in the construction of a modern nation. Taking a user-based perspective, Dr. Montaño reconstructs how electricity was lived, consumed, rejected, and shaped in everyday life (https://utpress.utexas.edu/books/montano-electrifying-mexico). For her articles on the intersection of humor and class in streetcar accidents see History of Technology (https://tinyurl.com/5cr7r6hu -) and  Technology's Stories (https://tinyurl.com/p4ucsmns). For her HAHR article on power theft in turn-of-the-century Mexico see https://tinyurl.com/9chy8s8v
     
     

     

  • mikaelw's picture

    Mikael Wolfe

    Mikael Wolfe is Associate Professor of History at Stanford University focusing on the intersection of social, political, environmental, and technological change in modern Latin America. In his scholarship and teaching, he employs interdisciplinary historical methods to explore questions of water control, agrarian reform, and the effects of climate and weather on the process of social revolution in Mexico and Cuba. He is the author of Watering the Revolution: An Environmental and Technological History of Agrarian Reform in Mexico (Duke, 2017) and numerous articles and book chapters on Mexico and Cuba, including in Journal of the Southwest, Mexican Studies, Hispanic American Historical Review, and Environmental History, as well as op-eds and feature articles in The Washington Post, The Orlando Sentinel, North American Congress on Latin America, and Jacobin. His second book project is titled Rebellious Climates: How Weather and Geography Shaped the Cuban Revolution, 1955-1971.
     

     

52 Members