dc.description | Thesis (Ph.D.)--Georgetown University, 2009.; Includes bibliographical
references.; Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. Japan's occupation of Southeast Asia in
early 1942 cut off more than 90 percent of the global rubber supply to the World War II
Allies. Without an adequate supply of this strategic material to meet military-industrial
requirements, it was impossible to win the war. The Roosevelt Administration concluded that
the success of the Allied war effort could depend on increasing the productivity of rubber
tappers who extracted latex from rubber trees dispersed throughout Amazonian rainforests.; In
response to Roosevelt's appeal, Brazil's President organized a "Battle for
Rubber" to increase rubber production in the Amazon. The authoritarian Brazilian
government recruited around 30,000 "rubber soldiers," mainly from the arid
Northeast, and sent them to work on Amazonian rubber estates.; This study explores the
dynamics of global, national, and regional actors as they converged and interacted with
Amazonian society in the Battle for Rubber. Migrant rubber tappers, Amazonian rubber elites,
indigenous groups, North American technical advisers, Brazilian government agencies, and the
Roosevelt Administration were linked in a wartime enterprise to increase rubber production.;
Although the Battle for Rubber produced only modest increases in rubber production, I argue
that wartime intervention by the Brazilian state in the Amazonian economy was a catalyst for
significant transformations in the region, beginning in World War II and continuing into the
post-war era. The Brazilian government strengthened its role in the region's economy and
extended its authority into the vast Amazonian hinterlands. United States government financing
for labor recruitment, rubber estates, public health programs, and transportation
infrastructure for the Battle for Rubber advanced Brazil's long-term goals of integrating the
Amazonian frontier into the nation.; Thousands of rubber soldiers died of malnourishment and
disease in the rainforests during the Battle for rubber. Rubber soldiers who married Amazonian
women had the highest chances of survival, learning from them how to adapt to an unfamiliar
environment and integrate into local society. Amazonian elites successfully contested efforts
by the Brazilian and United States governments to break their stranglehold over the rubber
trade. Frontier indigenous societies adopted diverse strategies to survive yet another
onslaught of "civilization" on their traditional lands. | en |