RACE, NATION AND IDENTITY - BLACK TRANSNATIONALISM AND THE DISPUTES FOR BRAZILIANITY AND PAULISTANITY IN BLACK AND IMMIGRANT NEWSPAPERS IN SÃO PAULO IN THE EARLY 20th CENTURY.

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Marina Pereira de Almeida Mello

Abstract

A few decades after the official abolition of slavery in Brazil, in a scenario marked by cosmopolitanism, black individuals and populations have revolved eugenicist and hygienist expectations in the city of São Paulo. For to breaking with stereotyping and breaking with the image of exotic, in the sense of strange or foreign beings, imposed the formulation of strategies for the group had to face external and internal barriers. Amid the mass immigration of foreign populations, Family, Homeland and Education became the main bulwarks of the struggle undertaken by the black press in the period studied, in the sense of building a positive identity for the group.

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How to Cite
Mello, M. P. de A. (2020). RACE, NATION AND IDENTITY - BLACK TRANSNATIONALISM AND THE DISPUTES FOR BRAZILIANITY AND PAULISTANITY IN BLACK AND IMMIGRANT NEWSPAPERS IN SÃO PAULO IN THE EARLY 20th CENTURY. Journal of Black Brazilian Researchers Association, 12(Ed. Especi), 755–783. Retrieved from https://abpnrevista.org.br/site/article/view/992
Section
Caderno Temático