Workers, Soldiers, Activists: Black Mobilization in Brazil and Spanish America, 1800-2000


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How to Cite

Andrews, G. R. (2008). Workers, Soldiers, Activists: Black Mobilization in Brazil and Spanish America, 1800-2000. EIAL - Estudios Interdisciplinarios De América Latina Y El Caribe, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.61490/eial.v19i1.468

Abstract

Comparisons of race relations in Brazil and North America (United States) have a long history. As Thomas Skidmore's classic Black into White made clear, Brazilian writers and intellectuals were already drawing such comparisons by the late 1800s; and Gilberto Freyre's direct observations of Jim Crow segregation in the United States south provided the implicit backdrop to his seminal portrait of Brazilian race relations in Casa grande e senzala (1933) and Sobrados e mocambos (1936). Meanwhile North American observers, ranging from former President Theodore Roosevelt to African-American writers and journalists, were commenting on patterns of race in Brazil and contrasting those patterns, either implicitly or explicitly, to race relations in the United States.
https://doi.org/10.61490/eial.v19i1.468
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