Claiming Brazil
Performances of Citizenship in the Centenary of Independence
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Brazil marked its centennial as an independent country in 1922. Claiming Brazil explores how Brazilians from different walks of life commemorated the event, and how this led to conflicting ideas of national identity. Civic rituals hold enormous significance, and Brazilian citizens, immigrants, and visitors employed them to articulate and perform their sense of what Brazil was, stood for, and could be. Gregg Bocketti argues that these celebrations, rather than uniting the country, highlighted tensions between modernity and tradition, over race and ethnicity, and between nation and region. Further, the rituals contributed to the collapse of the country's social and political status quo and gave substance to the debates and ideas that characterized Brazilian life in the 1920s and then under the transformative rule of GetĂșlio Vargas (1930â1945). Now, at the bicentennial of Brazil's independence, which itself unfolds in a period of political crisis and economic dislocation, and in the aftermath of several large civic events, it is an opportune moment to consider how Brazilians used civic rituals to engage with questions of identity, belonging, and citizenship one hundred years ago.
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Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Fishermen and Aviators: Time, Race, and Region in the Raids of the Centenary
- Chapter 2: A Nation of Parts: The Centenary Exposition and Centenary Sports
- Chapter 3: The Uses of Independence and Other Histories
- Chapter 4: Citizens of the Patria(s): Immigrants and the Centenary
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index