‘The Roots of a Plant that Today is Brazil’: Indians and the Nation-State under the Brazilian Estado Novo The author wishes to thank Emilia Viotti da Costa, Gil Joseph, Jeff Lesser, and the JLAS readers for their helpful comments and suggestions.
GARFIELD, SETH; GARFIELD SETH; Bowdoin College
Журнал:
Journal of Latin American Studies
Дата:
1997
Аннотация:
This article looks at the construction of the Indian by government officials and intellectuals during the Estado Novo (1937–45), and the efforts of indigenous peoples to engage these images. State officials – concerned with national consolidation, territorial defense, and racial pedigree – upheld the Indian as an icon who had made invaluable contributions to Brazilian historical and cultural formation. The proto-patriot, however, could only be fully redeemed through government tutelage. Confronted by an ambiguous state project, indigenous groups demonstrated varied responses.
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