Lexington Books
Pages: 318
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-1013-3 • Hardback • June 2005 • $140.00 • (£108.00)
978-0-7391-1014-0 • Paperback • February 2007 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
JessZ Souza is professor at the department of sociology, UENF, Rio de Janeiro. Valter Sinder is coordinator of the course of social sciences of the Pontifical Catholic University, Rio de Janeiro and professor of anthropology at the University of the State of Rio de Janeiro.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Society and Politics
Chapter 3 The Singularity of the Peripheral Social Inequality
Chapter 4 Culture, Democracy, and the Formation of the Public Sphere in Brazil
Chapter 5 Between Under-Integration and Over-Integration: Not Taking Citizenship Seriously
Chapter 6 The Paraguayan War: A Constitutional, Political, and Economic Turning Point for Brazil
Chapter 7 Max Weber and the Interpretation of Brazil
Chapter 8 Racial Democracy
Chapter 9 From Bahia to Brazil: The UNESCO Race Relations Project
Part 10 Literature and Culture
Chapter 11 Brazilian Cultural Critique: Possible Scenarios of a Pending Debate
Chapter 12 The Republic and the Suburb: Literary Imagination and Modernity in Brazil
Chapter 13 Identity is the Other
Chapter 14 The Relevance of Machado de Assis
Chapter 15 From Bossa Nova to Tropicália: Restraint and Excess in Popular Music
Chapter 16 Elective Infidelities: Intellectuals and Politics
Chapter 17 An Amphibious Literature
. . . offers a wide-ranging and inclusive multidisciplinary analysis of Brazil's complex social and political identity.
— Perspectives on Politics
This collection brings together a wide array of (mostly) Brazilian authors, from various disciplines, who focus on different aspects and moments of Brazilian society, polity, culture and literature....The authors make clear at the outset that their intent was to provide a 'comprehensive and multifaceted picture', and to privilege 'diversity' both in terms of authorship as well as topic coverage, an aim that is broadly acheived.
— Latin American Studies
Like most edited collections, the fourteen essays in this volume are of varying quality and depth, although most of them are very fine contributions. especially to our understanding of intellectuals and ideas in Brazil in the twentieth century. The diverse disciplines of contributors also reflects the breadth and quality of scholars working on Brazil today in Brazilian academia.
— Luso-Brazilian Review