Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-2009
Keywords
new social movements, Brazil, black organizing, slavery, resistance
Abstract
This article argues that the vast literature on “new social movements” misrepresents the historicity of identity-based organization in Latin America. Such organizing is indeed much older than the literature suggests. To prove this argument, I provide a genealogy of black, identity-based organizing in Brazil. This genealogy makes clear that black organizing started when Africans first arrived in Brazil. To explain the ebbs and flows of this organizing, the theoretical frameworks of Sidney Tarrow and Susan Epstein, who focus on political opportunities and changing repertoires, respectively, prove to be more useful.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
Revista Nera, v. 12, no. 14, p. 48-62
Link to Full Text
http://www2.fct.unesp.br/nera/rev14.php
Scholar Commons Citation
Reiter, Bernd, "A Genealogy of Black Organizing in Brazil" (2009). Government and International Affairs Faculty Publications. 113.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/gia_facpub/113