Neoliberalism and Contemporary American Literature

Tucker-Abramson Note 16

What is missing from this map, but which the novel makes clear underpins all these spaces, is the rubber plantation in Brazil where Sandro’s father travels in 1942 to source rubber after the Japanese overran the previous global rubber frontier, Malaysia, cutting Italy off from its rubber supply (130). Geographer Jason Moore argues that revolutions in productivity, like that which occurred in the postwar period, fuse together the plunder and “enclosure of new geographical frontiers (including subterranean resources) and new scientific-technological revolutions in labor productivity” (228). While absent from Reno’s vision, the rubber frontier of Brazil, and specifically the violent control and extraction of cheap labor from the Brazilian workers that produced the rubber necessary to fuel this period of relative prosperity and freedom in the global north, is also central to the novel. Its enclosure is the precursor to the rise of Valera tires and thus, the absent cause of the entire network that shapes the novel’s form. See Jason W. Moore, “Cheap Food & Bad Money: Food, Frontiers, and Financialization in the Rise and Demise of Neoliberalism,” Review: A Journal of the Ferdinand Braudel Center, 33:2–3 (2010): 225–261.

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