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The Brazil Reader
The U.S. Government and the 1964 Coup d’État
edited_book
Publication date:
2019
Publisher:
Duke University Press
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Book Chapter
Publication date:
2019
Pages
: 416-419
DOI:
10.1215/9780822371793-108
SO-VID:
7cc63823-fc02-4648-8acd-2cf5b64e20e9
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 12
Letter to King Manuel I of Portugal
pp. 18
Captaincy Charter Granted to Duarte Coelho
pp. 21
Letter from a Jesuit Friar
pp. 25
Impressions of a French Calvinist
pp. 28
Indigenous Experiences of Colonization
pp. 32
On Cannibals
pp. 35
On the Customs of the Indians of the Land
pp. 38
A Description of the Tupinambá
pp. 41
History of a Voyage to the Land of Brazil
pp. 45
Portraits: Hans Staden
pp. 53
Letter from a Portuguese Trader
pp. 55
Exploration of the Amazon
pp. 59
The Inquisition in Brazil
pp. 64
Excerpts from the Sermon on the Rosary
pp. 68
The Sugar Industry
pp. 73
The Dutch Siege of Olinda and Recife
pp. 76
An Eyewitness Account of the First Battle of Guararapes
pp. 79
Two Documents in the War against Palmares
pp. 84
Bandeirantes
pp. 86
Portraits: Count Johan Maurits von Nassau-Seigen
pp. 97
The Brazilian Gold Rush
pp. 100
The Minas Uprising of 1720
pp. 104
Expulsion of the Jesuits from Brazil
pp. 107
Portugal, Brazil, and The Wealth of Nations
pp. 110
Poems from Baroque Minas
pp. 117
Tiradentes’s Sentence
pp. 119
The Tailors’ Revolt
pp. 122
Letter from a Sugar Mill Owner
pp. 126
Portraits: Chica da Silva de Oliveira
pp. 136
The Royal Family’s Journey to Brazil
pp. 137
Letter from a Son in Brazil to His Father in Portugal
pp. 140
Treaty between Portugal and Great Britain
pp. 145
Rio de Janeiro’s First Medical School
pp. 148
The Influence of the Haitian Revolution in Brazil
pp. 151
Petition for Pedro I to Remain in Brazil
pp. 154
Speech Given at the Cortes (National Assembly) of Lisbon
pp. 158
Portraits: Empress Maria Leopoldina of Brazil
pp. 168
On the Declaration of Brazilian Independence
pp. 170
Acclamation of Pedro as Emperor of Brazil
pp. 173
On Slavery
pp. 176
From the Journal of Maria Graham
pp. 181
Portugal Recognizes the Brazilian Empire
pp. 184
The Malê Revolt
pp. 187
How to Write the History of Brazil
pp. 190
Scenes from the Slave Trade
pp. 193
Cruelty to Slaves
pp. 197
The Praieira Revolution Manifesto to the World
pp. 199
Portraits: José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva
pp. 211
Memoirs of a Settler in Brazil
pp. 214
O Guarani
pp. 218
The U.S. Civil War and Slave Rebellions in Brazil
pp. 219
The Slave Ship
pp. 228
Victims and Executioners
pp. 233
The Republican Manifesto
pp. 236
Law of the Free Womb
pp. 240
Early Brazilian Feminism
pp. 243
Letters to the French Mineralogist Claude-Henri Gorceix
pp. 246
Selections from Abolitionism
pp. 250
A Critique of José de Alencar’s O Guarani
pp. 253
Abolition Decree
pp. 255
Portraits: Emperor Dom Pedro II
pp. 268
Hymn of the Proclamation of the Republic
pp. 271
The Human Races
pp. 274
Os Sertões or Rebellion in the Backlands
pp. 277
The Owner’s Pastry Shop
pp. 282
Revolt of the Whip
pp. 285
Three Types of Bureaucrats
pp. 290
On the Mestizo in Brazil
pp. 295
Demands of the São Paulo General Strike of 1917
pp. 298
Brazil and World War I
pp. 300
The Cannibalist Manifesto (Manifesto Antropófago)
pp. 309
Macunaíma
pp. 311
Revolutionary Manifestos from the Tenentes Revolts
pp. 316
An Essay on Brazilian Sadness
pp. 318
Portraits: Tarsila do Amaral
pp. 325
From the Platform of the Liberal Alliance
pp. 327
Prestes’s Declaration about the Liberal Alliance
pp. 330
The Masters and the Slaves
pp. 335
Speech by the First Woman Elected to Congress in Brazil
pp. 340
Manifesto of the National Liberating Alliance
pp. 344
The Cordial Man
pp. 349
Vargas and the Estado Novo
pp. 353
Rubber and the Allies’ War Effort
pp. 358
Portraits: Patrícia Galvão (Pagú)
pp. 369
Telenovelas in Constructing the Country of the Future
pp. 374
The Oil Is Ours
pp. 378
An Unrelenting Critic of Vargas
pp. 380
Vargas’s Suicide Letter
pp. 383
The Life of a Factory Worker
pp. 387
Operation Pan America
pp. 391
Excerpts from Child of the Dark
pp. 396
Education as a Practice of Freedom
pp. 399
Letter of Manumission for the Brazilian Peasant
pp. 402
Brazil’s New Foreign Policy
pp. 406
Development and the Northeast
pp. 411
President João Goulart’s Speech at Central do Brasil
pp. 414
March of the Family with God for Freedom
pp. 416
The U.S. Government and the 1964 Coup d’État
pp. 420
Portraits: Oscar Niemeyer
pp. 435
Institutional Act No. 1
pp. 439
A U.S. Senator Supports the New Military Government
pp. 442
The Brazilian Revolution
pp. 445
The Myth of Racial Democracy
pp. 449
A Brazilian Congressional Representative Speaks Out
pp. 451
Institutional Act No. 5
pp. 454
Letter from the Ilha Grande Prison
pp. 457
The Kidnapping of the U.S. Ambassador
pp. 460
A Letter to Pope Paul VI
pp. 466
Two Presidents at the White House
pp. 471
National Security and the Araguaian Guerrillas
pp. 474
What Color Are You?
pp. 479
Second-Wave Brazilian Feminism
pp. 481
LGBT Rights and Democracy
pp. 484
The Movement for Political Amnesty
pp. 489
Lula’s May Day Speech to Brazilian Workers
pp. 492
Portraits: Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil
pp. 506
Forty Seconds of AIDS
pp. 510
Affirmative Action in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
pp. 514
A Young Voice from the MST
pp. 519
World Social Forum Charter of Principles
pp. 523
The Bolsa Família Program
pp. 526
Music, Culture, and Globalization
pp. 531
The Inaugural Speech of Brazil’s First Female President
pp. 536
The June Revolts
pp. 541
Portraits: Herbert Daniel
pp. 547
Suggestions for Further Reading
pp. 557
Brazil in the Movies
pp. 577
Index
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