Globalization’s Glue: Plywood and Pine Trees Across the Americas
May 5, 2026
12:20 pm
Uris Hall, G08
This talk will explore the social, environmental, and economic legacies of plywood across the Americas, focusing on Honduras and the U.S. South. During and after World War II, demand for southern pine lumber created patterns of inequality that continue to shape the contemporary world. In 1964, the Georgia Pacific Corporation invented a process to create glued plywood from southern pine, transforming the political economy of forests across the hemisphere. Using ethnographic and archival research in rural Honduras, Arkansas, and Florida, this talk will explore how the search for building materials transformed and connected places across the Americas in surprising ways.
Daniel Reichman is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Rochester. A specialist in contemporary Latin America, he earned his PhD from Cornell and has conducted anthropological research in Honduras and Brazil. He is the author of two books, The Broken Village: Coffee, Migration, and Globalization in Honduras and Progress in the Balance: Mythologies of Development in Santos, Brazil. In addition to his academic writing, he writes for popular media outlets and has spoken on immigration policy at the White House, United Nations, and the Interamerican Development Bank. He is co-editor of the Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures, the longest running anthropology lecture series in North America, which is published by Duke University Press.
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Latin American and Caribbean Studies