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Why This World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 635

Why This World

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-01-30
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  • Publisher: Penguin UK

"That rare person who looked like Marlene Dietrich and wrote like Virginia Woolf," Clarice Lispector is one of the most popular but least understood of Latin American writers, and now, after years of research on three continents, drawing on previously unknown manuscripts and dozens of interviews, Benjamin Moser demonstrates how Lispector's development as a writer was directly connected to the story of her turbulent life. Born in the nightmarish landscape of post-World War I Ukraine, Clarice became, virtually from adolescence, a person whose beauty, genius, and eccentricity intrigued Brazil. Why This World tells how this precocious girl, through long exile abroad and difficult personal strugg...

Protest and Resistance in Angola and Brazil
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 340

Protest and Resistance in Angola and Brazil

Compilation of essays analysing social conflict and political opposition in Brazil and Angola - includes papers on the role of Portugal during colonialism, African nationalism, Brazilian revolutionary social movements and peasant movements, etc., and includes two comparisons on portugal's contribution to underdevelopment in Africa and Brazil and the relationship of religion, race and nationalism to social class protest and economic development. References.

Current Catalog
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 720

Current Catalog

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1969
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Includes subject section, name section, and 1968-1970, technical reports.

The Pan American Book Shelf
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 660

The Pan American Book Shelf

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1939
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Biopolitics of Beauty
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 266

The Biopolitics of Beauty

The eugenesis of beauty -- Plastic governmentality -- The circulation of beauty -- Hope, affect, mobility -- The raciology of beauty -- Cosmetic citizens

The South Atlantic
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 601

The South Atlantic

Everyone working in a problem as complex as continental drift, must at some time have feit the need for an objective data summary in fields other than his own. It is a scientific dilemma that, aIthough there is evident need for researchers with competence in many fields (the classical natural scientist), the time in volved in acquiring such broad experience is so great as to ren der the task largely impossible. The alternative seems to be the team approach, and we have espoused it in tbis volume. Editors and contributors alike have tried in this book to keep the accent upon factual information and to reduce interpretation to a minimum. Interpretation there must be, however, since without it ...

Emancipating the Female Sex
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 324

Emancipating the Female Sex

June E. Hahner’s pioneering work,Emancipating the Female Sex,offers the first comprehensive history of the struggle for women’s rights in Brazil. Based on previously undiscovered primary sources and fifteen years of research, Hahner’s study provides long-overdue recognition of the place of women in Latin American history. Hahner traces the history of Brazilian women’s fight for emancipation from its earliest manifestations in the mid-nineteenth century to the successful conclusion of the suffrage campaign in the 1930s. Drawing on interviews with surviving Brazilian suffragists and contemporary feminists as well as manuscripts and printed documents, Hahner explores the strategies and ideological positions of Brazilian feminists. In focusing on urban upper- and middle-class women, from whose ranks the leadership for change arose, she examines the relationship between feminism and social change in Brazil’s complex and highly stratified society.

Minoritarian Liberalism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 256

Minoritarian Liberalism

A mesmerizing ethnography of the largest favela in Rio, where residents articulate their own politics of freedom against the backdrop of multiple forms of oppression. Normative liberalism has promoted the freedom of privileged subjects, those entitled to rights—usually white, adult, heteronormative, and bourgeois—at the expense of marginalized groups, such as Black people, children, LGBTQ people, and slum dwellers. In this visceral ethnography of Rocinha, the largest favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Moisés Lino e Silva explores what happens when liberalism is challenged by people whose lives are impaired by normative understandings of liberty. He calls such marginalized visions of free...

Internationalism, Imperialism and the Formation of the Contemporary World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

Internationalism, Imperialism and the Formation of the Contemporary World

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-10-24
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  • Publisher: Springer

This volume offers innovative insights into and approaches to the multiple historical intersections between distinct modalities of internationalism and imperialism during the twentieth century, across a range of contexts. Bringing together scholars from diverse theoretical, methodological and geographical backgrounds, the book explores an array of fundamental actors, institutions and processes that have decisively shaped contemporary history and the present. Among other crucial topics, it considers the expansion in the number and scope of activities of international organizations and its impact on formal and informal imperial polities, as well as the propagation of developmentalist ethos and discourses, relating them to major historical processes such as the growing institutionalization of international scrutiny in the interwar years or, later, the emerging global Cold War.

Cleansing Honor with Blood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 315

Cleansing Honor with Blood

This book offers a critical reinterpretation of male violence, patriarchy, and machismo in rural Latin America. It focuses on the lives of lower-class men and women, known as sertanejo/as, in the hinterlands of the northeastern Brazilian province of Ceará between 1845 and 1889. Challenging the widely accepted depiction of sertanejos as conditioned to violence by nature, culture, and climate, Santos argues that their concern with maintaining an honorable manly reputation and the use of violence were historically contingent strategies employed to resolve conflicts over scant resources and to establish power over women and other men. She also traces a shift in the functioning of patriarchy that coincided with changes in the material fortunes of sertanejo families. As economic dislocation, environmental calamity, and family separation led to greater female autonomy and an erosion of patriarchal authority in the home, public—and often violent—enforcement of male power maintained patriarchal order in these communities.