Results 11 to 20 of about 14,651 (94)

Some Contrasting Visions of Luso-Tropicalism in India

open access: yes, 1997
A visão lusotropicalista de Gilberto Freyre e o seu apelo propagandistico são compreensiveis no contexto das suas ligações familiares e pessoais a Portugal e da conjuntura política portugesa e internacional em que ele viveu. É possível colher visões direrentes e contrárias das pessoas que fizeram parte do lusotropicalismo na Índia, e dos que observaram
de Souza, Teotónio R.
core   +4 more sources

Luso-tropicalism debunked, again. Race, racism, and racialism in three Portuguese-speaking societies

open access: yes, 2019
The term Luso-tropicalism was crafted in the 1950s by the Brazilian anthropologist and cultural historian Gilberto Freyre. In his earlier works on colonial Brazil, Freyre suggested that the Portuguese colonizers had a special ability to adapt to the tropics by easily intermingling, intermarrying, and interchanging cultural elements with different ...
Bastos, Cristiana
core   +3 more sources

Representations of colonialism and racism in Portugal: The role of luso-tropicalism and historical defensiveness [PDF]

open access: yes, 2023
Research shows that history telling serves a purpose of maintaining hierarchical structures within national groups to benefit a historical perpetrator group and disadvantage a historically victimized group. In the case of colonialism, this often leads to
Meuer, Felix
core   +1 more source

Towards a complete phylogeny of African Melastomateae: Systematics of Dissotis and allies (Melastomataceae)

open access: yesTAXON, Volume 69, Issue 5, Page 946-991, October 2020., 2020
Abstract Dissotis has long been regarded as the most species‐rich genus of African Melastomataceae, yet its diagnostic characters have never been examined in an explicitly phylogenetic context. In a previous study, we recovered a large clade consisting of “Dissotis and allies” but with poorly understood generic limits. Here we present a nearly complete
Marie Claire Veranso‐Libalah   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Una decolonizzazione mai terminata. Il modello portoghese di colonizzazione in Brasile e la costruzione dell’Altro/a africano/a nell’immaginario razzista

open access: yesAltre Modernità, 2016
In this paper I analyse how the narrative discourse about the presumed specific characteristics of Portuguese colonization in Brazil moulded racism in Brazil and Portugal.
Valeria Ribeiro Corossacz
doaj   +1 more source

Sarmento Rodrigues, a Guiné e o luso-tropicalismo [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
No pós-guerra, Marcello Caetano, Ministro das Colónias, e Sarmento Rodrigues, Governador da Guiné, ensaiaram uma nova política colonial que visava a expansão da administração colonial, a associação dos “assimilados” à governação e o desenvolvimento ...
Silva, António E. Duarte
core   +2 more sources

Periphery as a work eccentric modernities and lusophone-tropical rearrangements

open access: yesRevista do Instituto de Estudos Brasileiros, 2014
The last decade theoretical accumulation on peripheries has turned this concept into a fundamental tool to approach contemporaneity. It has become an effective key to rethink the complex morphology of modernities, in particular when the modernization ...
Roberto Vecchi
doaj   +1 more source

UEG Week 2023 Poster Presentations

open access: yes, 2023
United European Gastroenterology Journal, Volume 11, Issue S8, Page 535-1498, October 2023.
wiley   +1 more source

Masculinités et travail sexuel : le cas des hommes brésiliens au Portugal

open access: yesBrésil(s)
This article is part of a broader study on Brazilian male sex work in Lisbon/Portugal/Europe. This branch of the sex market in Portugal is characterized by the hegemonic presence of Brazilian men.
Guilherme R. Passamani
doaj   +1 more source

A Journey Between Science and the Arts: Templates for the Depiction of the Pineapple (Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries)

open access: yesRenaissance Studies, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Native to America, the pineapple—Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.—delighted the Europeans who came across it. The fruit was mentioned by the voyagers and missionaries who observed and tasted it in the Americas and, from the 1500s onwards, infused reports, chronicles and natural history treatises with colour and flavour.
Teresa Nobre de Carvalho
wiley   +1 more source

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