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“Racial Democracy” and Black Consciousness “Racial Democracy” and Black Consciousness
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The Anatomy of Skepticism The Anatomy of Skepticism
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The Uses and Abuses of Comparison The Uses and Abuses of Comparison
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Desire, Denial, and Linked Analogies Desire, Denial, and Linked Analogies
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Popular Culture, Tropicália, and the Rainbow Atlantic Popular Culture, Tropicália, and the Rainbow Atlantic
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Scholarship and the Persistence of Race Scholarship and the Persistence of Race
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6 Brazil, the United States, and the Culture Wars
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Published:May 2012
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Abstract
The chapter describes post-World War II Brazil, a time of relative democratization after the end of Vargas' authoritarian New State in 1945. Specifically, Brazilian left intellectuals expressed support for the decolonization of Asia and Africa, including the region that most directly concerned Brazil. Many left Brazilian intellectuals sympathized with Indian independence in 1947, the Cuban Revolution in 1959, and Algerian independence in 1962.These intellectuals' nationalist political project rejected “European and U.S. economic liberalism and cultural imperialism...and the construction of state-regulated capitalism and an indigenous national culture with a popular foundation.”
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