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Autores
Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
The term Luso-tropicalism was crafted in the 1950s by the Brazilian anthropologist
and cultural historian Gilberto Freyre. In his earlier works on colonial
Brazil, Freyre suggested that the Portuguese colonizers had a special ability to
adapt to the tropics by easily intermingling, intermarrying, and interchanging
cultural elements with different peoples, given that they were themselves the
result of multiple mixtures. Two decades later, he expanded the idea into a
concept suitable to all societies sharing Portuguese influence, whether colonial
plantations, settler societies, or conquest territories.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Luso-tropicalism Racism Portuguese colonialism
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Bastos, C. (2019). Luso-tropicalism debunked, again. Race, racism, and racialism in three Portuguese-speaking societies. In Anderson, W., Roque, R., Santos, R. V. (Eds.), Luso-tropicalism and its discontents: the making and unmaking of racial exceptionalism, pp. 243-264. New York. Oxford: Berghahn
