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Mocidade e exílio
  • Language: pt-BR
  • Pages: 334

Mocidade e exílio

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1940
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Mocidade e exílio
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 334

Mocidade e exílio

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1940
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Mocidade e exilio
  • Language: pt-BR
  • Pages: 366

Mocidade e exilio

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1934
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Mocidade e exilio
  • Language: pt-BR
  • Pages: 348

Mocidade e exilio

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1949
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Class Mates
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

Class Mates

This innovative study considers how approximately seven thousand male graduates of law came to understand themselves as having a legitimate claim to authority over nineteenth-century Brazilian society during their transition from boyhood to manhood. While pursuing their traditional studies at Brazil's two law schools, the students devoted much of their energies to theater and literature in an effort to improve their powers of public speaking and written persuasion. These newly minted lawyers quickly became the magistrates, bureaucrats, local and national politicians, diplomats, and cabinet members who would rule Brazil until the fall of the monarchy in 1889. Andrew J. Kirkendall examines the meaning of liberalism for a slave society, the tension between systems of patriarchy and patronage, and the link between language and power in a largely illiterate society. In the interplay between identity and state formation, he explores the processes of socialization that helped Brazil achieve a greater measure of political stability than any other Latin American country.

The Cambridge History of Latin America
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 980

The Cambridge History of Latin America

This volume examines Latin American history from c. 1870 to 1930.

Feeding the City
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 352

Feeding the City

On the eastern coast of Brazil, facing westward across a wide magnificent bay, lies Salvador, a major city in the Americas at the end of the eighteenth century. Those who distributed and sold food, from the poorest street vendors to the most prosperous traders—black and white, male and female, slave and free, Brazilian, Portuguese, and African—were connected in tangled ways to each other and to practically everyone else in the city, and are the subjects of this book. Food traders formed the city's most dynamic social component during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, constantly negotiating their social place. The boatmen who brought food to the city from across the bay ...

Emancipatory Narratives & Enslaved Motherhood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 440

Emancipatory Narratives & Enslaved Motherhood

Emancipatory Narratives & Enslaved Motherhood examines three major currents in the historiography of Brazilian slavery: manumission, miscegenation, and creolisation. It revisits themes central to the history of slavery and race relations in Brazil, updates the research about them, and revises interpretations of the role of gender and reproduction within them. First, about the preponderance of women and children in manumission; second, about the association of black female mobility with intimate inter-racial relations; third, about the racialised and gendered routes to freed status; and fourth, about the legacies of West African female socio-economic behaviours for modalities of family and fr...

Judge and Jury in Imperial Brazil, 1808–1871
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 285

Judge and Jury in Imperial Brazil, 1808–1871

In nineteenth-century Brazil the power of the courts rivaled that of the central government, bringing to it during its first half century of independence a stability unique in Latin America. Thomas Flory analyzes the Brazilian lower-court system, where the private interests of society and the public interests of the state intersected. Justices of the peace—lay judges elected at the parish level—played a special role in the early years of independence, for the post represented the triumph of Brazilian liberalism’s commitment to localism and decentralization. However, as Flory shows by tracing the social history and performance of parish judges, the institution actually intensified confl...