From recent data on disparities between Brazilian whites and
non-whites in areas of health, education, and welfare, it is clear
that vast racial inequalities do exist in Brazil, contrary to
earlier assertions in race relations scholarship that the country
is a "racial democracy." Here Michael George Hanchard explores the
implications of this increasingly evident racial inequality,
highlighting Afro-Brazilian attempts at mobilizing for civil rights
and the powerful efforts of white elites to neutralize such
attempts. Within a neo-Gramscian framework, Hanchard shows how
racial hegemony in Brazil has hampered ethnic and racial
identification among non-whites by simultaneously promoting racial
discrimination and false premises of racial equality.
Drawing from personal archives of and interviews with
participants in the Movimento Negro of Rio de Janeiro and Sao
Paulo, Hanchard presents a wealth of empirical evidence about
Afro-Brazilian militants, comparing their effectiveness with their
counterparts in sub-Saharan Africa, the United States, and the
Caribbean in the post-World War II period. He analyzes, in
comprehensive detail, the extreme difficulties experienced by
Afro-Brazilian activists in identifying and redressing racially
specific patterns of violation and discrimination. Hanchard argues
that the Afro-American struggle to subvert dominant cultural forms
and practices carries the danger of being subsumed by the
contradictions that these dominant forms produce.
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