When:
April 6, 2018 @ 12:30 pm – April 8, 2018 @ 3:30 pm
2018-04-06T12:30:00-04:00
2018-04-08T15:30:00-04:00

Event will be cancelled if CUPE 3903 strike is ongoing

Toronto Brazilian History Workshop:

Brazil from Empire to Republic and Dictatorship to Democracy

April 6, 2018, 12:30 to 3:00 p.m.

Glendon College, York University

 

12:30 Peter Beattie, Michigan State University, “The Prodigal’s Work Ethic: Patriarchy, Consumption, Happiness, Vice and Honor in Imperial Brazil”

This presentation explores an “interdiction” (interdição) suit that a wealthy Recife merchant originally filed with a Judge of Orphans in 1869 against his “prodigal” adult son to control his spending and abrogate his right to contract loans.  The analysis illustrates the power a well-connected patriarch could exert to curtail his own son’s liberty in a slave society undergoing a gradual transition to free labor.  The receipts, correspondence, and testimony collected in the suit provide unique insights into the norms and values that elite merchant families disputed in relation to patriarchy, consumption, happiness, vice, honor, and manhood in one of the most venerable slave communities in the Americas.  I argue that these terms are interrelated in court and other records and that they share many referential and conceptual moorings in slave status in late imperial Brazil.  This family history also reveals common tensions that riveted merchant families and their evolving relationships over the course of their lives.

 

Dr. Beattie’s publications include Punishment in Paradise: Race, Slavery, Human Rights, and a Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Penal Colony (Duke, 2015) and The Tribute of Blood: Army, Honor, Race and Nation in Brazil, 1864-1945 (Duke, 2001), more about his research can be found here:

http://history.msu.edu/people/faculty/peter-beattie/

 

Jeffrey Lesser, Emory University:

Bad Health in a Good Retreat: Walking among the Living and the Dead in São Paulo, 1880 to the present

Bom Retiro was (and is) a small neighborhood in the huge megalopolis of São Paulo, Brazil. Filled with small factories and warehouses, the working-class neighborhood has been populated since the end of the 19th century by immigrants, migrants from the impoverished Brazilian northeast, and Afro-Brazilian descendants of slaves. While the cultural backgrounds of the immigrants have shifted (from Italians, Spaniards and Portuguese Catholics in the early 20th century to East European Jews in the mid 20th century to Chinese, Korean and Bolivian immigrants today), the neighborhood has always been viewed internally and externally as one where health (in the broadest sense of the word) is precarious. “Bad Health in a Good Retreat” analyzes the public’s health by focusing on one square block of lower Bom Retiro from about 1900 to the present. My data, from a number of different types of sources, will allow me to analyze the stories residents tellabout how to avoid water born diseases and about state imposed campaigns of social control against crime to dengue. The project takes advantage of new digital methodologies that allow me to map the public’s health and how that same public has thought about health over time. 

Dr. Lesser’s publications include Immigration, Ethnicity and National Identity in Brazil (Cambridge, 2013; Editora UNESP); A Discontented Diaspora: Japanese-Brazilians and the Meanings of Ethnic Militancy (Duke, 2007; Editora Paz e Terra, 2008); Negotiating National Identity: Immigrants, Minorities and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil (Duke, 1999; Editora UNESP, 2001) and Welcoming the Undesirables: Brazil and the Jewish Question (University of California Press, 1994). His c.v., and more on his research projects can be found here:

http://history.emory.edu/home/people/faculty/lesser-jeffrey.html

 

Thomas Rogers, Emory University, The people, united, will not be polluted”: Popular and State Responses to Biofuel Pollution in Brazil

In the mid-1970s, Brazilian ethanol producers marketed their fuel as a homegrown alternative to imported oil. By the mid-2000s, they used the term “biofuel,” casting it as a green substitute for fossil fuels. In between, ethanol production from sugarcane polluted streams and rivers, prompting groups of citizens to protest and state officials to increase regulation. Debates over these environmental impacts unfolded at the same time that Brazil emerged from a generation-long dictatorship. This paper will examine the overlapping of pro-democracy agitation with an emerging environmental movement.

 

Dr. Rogers’ publications include The Deepest Wounds: A Labor and Environmental History of Sugar in Northeast Brazil (University of North Carolina, 2010). His c.v., and more on his research projects can be found here: http://history.emory.edu/home/people/faculty/rogers-thomas.html

 

Jerry Dávila, University of Illinois- Urbana-Champaign, Racial Discrimination and Re-democratization in 1970s and 1980s Brazil

In Plain Sight: Racial Discrimination in Brazil, 1951-1989

In the last 30 years, Brazil has been reshaped by movements against racial discrimination and policies to promote integration.  But what of the decades before this success – the era dominated by mythologies about benign racial and ethnic relations in Brazil?  By mapping newspaper reports and court cases, this presentation explores patterns of racial and ethnic discrimination, as well as popular reactions to discrimination.  This history shows challenges to discrimination that extended well beyond the work of activists and intellectuals, existed for decades, and took place throughout Brazil.

 Dr. Dávila’s publications include Hotel Trópico: Brazil and the Challenge of African Decolonization (Duke, 2010), Diploma of Whiteness: Race and Social Policy in Brazil, 1917-1945 (Duke, 2003), and Dictatorship in South America (Wiley, 2013) His c.v., and more on his research projects, can be found here:

https://history.illinois.edu/directory/profile/jdavila

 

Brazilian History Workshop _2

HIST 4630 Visiting Research talks April 2018

2018 Event Notification 2018April6

Brazilian History Workshop _2