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Published in 2008 and winner of the 2011 Thomas E. Skidmore Prize,
Paulo Fontes's Migration and the Making of Industrial Sao Paulo is
a detailed social history of Sao Paulo's extraordinary urban and
industrial expansion. Fontes focuses on those migrants who settled
in the suburb of Sao Miguel Paulista, which grew from 7,000
residents in the 1940s to over 140,000 two decades later.
Reconstructing these migrants' everyday lives within a broad social
context, Fontes examines the economic conditions that prompted
their migration, their creation of an integrated identity and
community, and their efforts to gain worker rights. Fontes
challenges the stereotypes of Northeasterners as culturally
backward, uneducated, violent, and unreliable, instead seeing them
as a resourceful population with considerable social and political
resolve. Fontes's investigations into Northeastern life in Sao
Miguel Paulista yield a fresh understanding of Sao Paulo's
incredible and difficult growth while outlining how a marginalized
population exercised its political agency.
Published in 2008 and winner of the 2011 Thomas E. Skidmore Prize,
Paulo Fontes's Migration and the Making of Industrial Sao Paulo is
a detailed social history of Sao Paulo's extraordinary urban and
industrial expansion. Fontes focuses on those migrants who settled
in the suburb of Sao Miguel Paulista, which grew from 7,000
residents in the 1940s to over 140,000 two decades later.
Reconstructing these migrants' everyday lives within a broad social
context, Fontes examines the economic conditions that prompted
their migration, their creation of an integrated identity and
community, and their efforts to gain worker rights. Fontes
challenges the stereotypes of Northeasterners as culturally
backward, uneducated, violent, and unreliable, instead seeing them
as a resourceful population with considerable social and political
resolve. Fontes's investigations into Northeastern life in Sao
Miguel Paulista yield a fresh understanding of Sao Paulo's
incredible and difficult growth while outlining how a marginalized
population exercised its political agency.
Brazil has done much to shape football, but how has football shaped
Brazil? Despite the political and social importance of the
beautiful game to the country, the subject has hitherto received
little attention. This book presents groundbreaking work by
historians and researchers from Brazil, the United States, Britain
and France, who examine the political significance, in the broadest
sense, of the sport in which Brazil has long been a world leader.
The authors consider questions such as the relationship between
football, the workplace and working class culture; the formation of
Brazilian national identity; race relations; political and social
movements; and the impact of the sport on social mobility.
Contributions to the book range in time from the late nineteenth
century, when the British first introduced the sport to Brazil, to
the present day, as the 'country of football' prepares itself to
host the 2014 World Cup, painting a vivid picture of the many ways
in which football exists and functions in Brazil, both on and off
the pitch.
This volume examines Brazilian labour history, integrating issues
of gender, race, and ethnicity by addressing topics such as free
and unfree labour in the nineteenth-century Amazon, the
transnational contexts of urban sex work, the intersection of
'class' and 'community' in a Sao Paulo workers' bairro, and the
(legal) struggles of sugar cane workers in Pernambuco. At the same
time, this volume presents a renewed historiography of movements
and organisations (often with an emphasis on transnational
dimensions), covering issues from revolutionary syndicalism in Rio,
through the role of World War II in the formation of Brazilian
populism, to the intervention of US 'free unionism' during the
military dictatorships in Brazil and Argentina. This volume goes
beyond a survey of more recent Brazilian labour history and offers
articles that enter into conscious dialogue with the debates and
findings of scholarship in other world regions.
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