<p><strong>Eliane Brum: 'The fight for the Amazon is the fight against our extinction'</strong></p>
<p>https://revistamarieclaire.globo.com/Cultura/noticia/2021/12/eliane-brum-luta-pela-amazonia-e-luta-contra-nossa-extincao.html</p>
- Humberto Toze, Marie Claire (Brazil)
<p><strong>Banzeiro Òkòtó: a breathtaking experience (APPOA Column)</strong></p>
<p>https://sul21.com.br/opiniao/2022/02/banzeiro-okoto-uma-experiencia-arrebatadora-coluna-da-appoa/</p>
Sul21
<p><strong>This year, I only needed to open my window in Brazil to witness the climate crisis</strong></p>
<p>‘My snapshot of 2022 shows the Amazon burning – but what it doesn’t communicate is the pain’</p>
<p>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/dec/29/this-year-i-only-needed-to-open-my-window-in-brazil-to-witness-the-climate-crisis</p>
- Eliane Brum, The Guardian
<p><strong>5 – Star Review from Peter Whittaker</strong></p>
<p>‘beyond reportage, beyond polemic; channelling the many voices’</p>
<p>https://newint.org/node/29987</p>
- Peter Whittaker, New Internationalist
<p><strong>A Manifesto for a New World, With the Amazon at Its Center</strong></p>
<p>“Banzeiro Òkòtó,” by Eliane Brum, considers the devastating impacts of mass deforestation on Brazil and its people.</p>
<p>https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/07/books/review/eliane-brum-banzeiro-okoto.html?smid=tw-share</p>
- William Atkins, The New York Times
<p><strong>The Amazon’s History is Also That of Its Indigenous Residents</strong></p>
<p>Eliane Brum on Whiteness, Bodies in Different Languages, and a More Holistic Approach to Ecology</p>
<p>https://lithub.com/the-amazons-history-is-also-that-of-its-indigenous-residents/</p>
Literary Hub
<p><strong>Living with the Xingu in deepest Amazonia</strong></p>
<p>The Brazilian journalist Eliane Brum moves from São Paulo to ‘reforest’ herself in the Amazon, and slowly gains the trust of a wary, isolated tribal people.</p>
<p>https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/living-with-the-xingu-in-deepest-amazonia/</p>
- Hugh Tomson, The Spectator
<p><strong>Journalism from the centre of the world</strong></p>
<p>https://sumauma.com/en/</p>
SUMAÚMA
<p><strong>April Edition</strong></p>
<p>https://emagazine.com/</p>
The Environment
<p><strong>One Journalist’s Dispatch From the Battle to Protect the Amazon Rainforest</strong></p>
<p>https://www.insidehook.com/article/books/new-book-banzeiro-okoto-preservation-amazon-rainforest</p>
InsideHook
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Eliane Brum is an award-winning Brazilian journalist, writer, and documentarist. Her work of nonfiction, The Collector of Leftover Souls, was longlisted for the National Book Award for translated literature.
She is a columnist for the international section of El País among other European and US newspapers and magazines. She is a founder of Sumaúma: Journalism from the Centre of the World, a trilingual news platform based in Altamira, in the Amazon rainforest, where she lives. Her work as a journalist has won more than 40 prizes.
Diane Whitty has translated over a dozen major books from the Portuguese, including The Collector of Leftover Souls by Eliane Brum. She spent twenty-three years in Brazil and now lives in Wisconsin with her husband.