Manoel Rendeiro Neto

Manoel Rendeiro Neto's picture
Postdoctoral Associate in History
Office: 
HQ 236
Phone: 
203-436-4951
Fields of interest: 

Latin America and the Caribbean, Pan-Amazonian History, Brazilian History, African Diaspora Studies, Indigenous History, Environmental Humanities, and Transimperial Histories

Bio: 
Manoel Rendeiro Neto (he/his/him) holds a B.A. and a teaching degree in History from the University of Brasília, and a M.A. and Ph.D. in Latin American History from the University of California, Davis, with a specialization in African Diaspora Studies. Currently, Rendeiro Neto is a Postdoctoral Associate and Lecturer in the Department of History and Affiliate Fellow at the Program in Agrarian Studies at Yale University. Beginning in the fall of 2026, Rendeiro Neto will assume the position of Assistant Professor of Colonial Latin American History at Yale University.
 
Rendeiro Neto’s research focuses on the role of environmental knowledge in empire-building, ethno-racial stratification, and autonomous territorialization in the emergence of an Afro-Indigenous Amazon. Besides working on his book manuscript “Imperial Tides, Runaway Rivers: Cultivating Knowledge, Labor, and Sovereignty in the Atlantic Amazon (1750-1850),” he is developing articles related to waterscape engineering interventions and slavery in 18th century French Guiana; and Indigenous Amazonian women’s role as commercial agents on inter-village trade of domestic produce during Portuguese colonization. His research has been supported by the Conference on Latin American History, the Dumbarton Oaks in conjunction with the Mellon Foundation, the Huntington Library, the John Carter Brown Library, the Luso-American Development Foundation, University of California Humanities Research Institute, among others.
 
Born and raised in the Brazilian Amazon, Rendeiro Neto is committed to research projects on traditional Afro-Indigenous Amazonian communities and their histories to foster the development of growing interdisciplinary studies about the largest rainforest in the world from early modern times to present day challenges.
 
Selected Publications:
Manoel Rendeiro Neto, Lana Sato, Carlos Antônio Carvalho, and Tiago Luís Gil, “Eliminating White Spots: A Disassembly of Curt Nimuendajú’s Indigenist Cartography.” História Da Historiografia: International Journal of Theory and History of Historiography 14, no. 37 (2021): 17-61, DOI: https://doi.org/10.15848/hh.v14i37.1686
 
Manoel Rendeiro Neto, João Pedro Galvão Ramalho, Vinicius Sodré Maluly, and Tiago Luís Gil, “Les Groupes Autochtones et La Morphologie de La Conquête en Amérique Portugaise.” Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos, Debates (2020), DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/nuevomundo.81011
 
Manoel Rendeiro Neto, Tiago Luís Gil, Leonardo Barleta, and et all, Atlas Histórico da América Lusa (Ladeira Livros, 2016).
 
Period: 
Early Modern
Modern
Geography: 
Atlantic
Caribbean
Global/International
Latin America
Thematic: 
Comparative
Empires & Colonialism
Environmental
Political
Race & Ethnicity
Social
Spatial/Geographic