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Brazil
Five Centuries of Change
Taschenbuch von James Green (u. a.)
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
Revised for its third edition, Brazil: Five Centuries of Change vividly traces the development of Brazil over the last 500 years.
Revised for its third edition, Brazil: Five Centuries of Change vividly traces the development of Brazil over the last 500 years.
Über den Autor
James Green is Carlos Manuel de Céspedes Professor of Modern Latin American History at Brown University

Thomas E. Skidmore was one of the foremost American scholars of Brazil and the former Carlos Manuel de Céspedes Professor of Latin American History at Brown University
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • List of Exhibits and Images

  • Preface

  • Introduction Why Read a History of Brazil?

  • Chapter 1 The Making of Colonial Brazil, 1500-1694

  • The First Occupants of the Land

  • Everyday Life, War, and Rituals

  • Portuguese Overseas Expansion

  • Early Consolidation of the Portuguese Monarchy

  • Setting up a Global Trading Network

  • The Portuguese Encounter Land to the West

  • First European Impressions

  • Portuguese Land Claims

  • Brazilwood and Indigenous Slavery

  • Go-betweens

  • Imperial Reorganization

  • French Claims

  • The Sugar Industry

  • Enslaved Africans

  • Resistance to Slavery

  • Unification of Spain and Portugal

  • Dutch Occupation of the Northeast

  • Emergence of the Myth of the Bandeirante

  • Imperial Control

  • Gold

  • Chapter 2 A New Colonial Order, 1695-1821

  • Manumission of slaves

  • Religious Orders

  • Conflicts in the Mining Region

  • Tensions in the Northeast

  • Pombaline Reforms

  • Indigenous Resistance

  • The Influence of Enlightenment Ideas

  • The Mineira Conspiracy

  • Tailors' Revolt in Salvador

  • The Portuguese Court Comes to Brazil

  • Creating a New Portuguese America

  • Indigenous Resistance

  • Pernambuco Revolution, 1817

  • A Portuguese Revolt and its Impact on Brazil

  • Chapter 3 Independent Brazil and the Consolidation of a Nation, 1822-1850

  • Brazilian Hierarchies

  • A Constitution

  • The Emperor's Tribulations

  • The Regency

  • Regional Revolts

  • Recentralization

  • Pedro II as Emperor

  • The Rise of Coffee

  • Land Ownership

  • Growing Challenges to Slavery

  • Chapter 4 Late Imperial Brazil, 1851-1889

  • Gradually Ending Slavery

  • The Emperor and His Pedestal

  • The Paraguayan War

  • The Effects of the War

  • The Viscount of Mauá

  • The Great Drought and the Amazon Rubber Boom

  • New Roles for Middle-class Women

  • Positivism, Republicanism, and the Military Question

  • The Move toward Abolition

  • Immigration

  • The End of the Empire

  • Chapter 5 Republican Brazil, 1889-1929

  • Modernizing Brazil"

  • Whitening Brazil

  • The Reality behind the Façade

  • Indigenous Brazil

  • Coffee Price Fluctuations and Emerging Industry

  • The Roots of Industrialization

  • Worker Organization and Employers' Strategy

  • Evaporation of the Oligarchical Consensus

  • A Message from Below

  • Economic Strains

  • The Shock of World War I

  • The Economy after the War

  • Brazil's Uneven Development

  • Rebellion in the Army

  • The Modern Woman and an Emerging Feminist Movement

  • Modernism, Brazilian Style

  • Rise of Anti-Liberal Thought

  • The Disintegration of the Old Politics

  • The Revolution of 1930

  • Chapter 6 Getúlio Vargas in Power, 1930-45

  • Swing toward Centralization

  • Electoral rights

  • Ideological Polarization

  • Getúlio Vargas as Dictator

  • The Vargas Style

  • Corporatist Inroads

  • A New Search for National Identity

  • Juggling the International Options

  • World War II and the Rise of U.S. Influence

  • Brazil and the War Effort

  • Collapse of the Dictatorship at Home

  • Chapter 7 Experiments in Democracy, 1946-64

  • The 1945 Election and the Dutra Period

  • Vargas Returns

  • From Oligarch to Populist

  • Vargas's Legislative Program Runs into Trouble

  • Vargas's Demise

  • Suicide

  • Population Growth, Regional Disequilibria, and Migration

  • A New President, Juscelino Kubitschek, Elected

  • Political Strategy

  • The Economic Development Program

  • A New Capital

  • Dealing with the World Economy

  • The Brief Presidency of Jânio Quadros

  • The Succession of João Goulart

  • Populists versus the Military

  • Brazilian Culture

  • The National Union of Students

  • The Economic Crisis Escalates

  • Chapter 8 Rule of the Military, 1964-1985

  • The Generals in Power

  • Growing Repression, Growing Opposition

  • Strengthening the Military Regime

  • Indigenous Policy under Military Rule

  • Growing Opposition

  • Crackdown

  • The Economic Miracle

  • Hyper-Nationalism

  • The Arrival of the Guerrillas

  • Cultural Resistance

  • Mass Media during the Dictatorship

  • The Use of Torture

  • Exile

  • An Economic Turn for the Worse

  • The Winners and Losers

  • The Road to Redemocratization

  • Manipulating the Electoral System and Continued Repression

  • New Social Movements

  • The Working Class Takes Center Stage

  • The Last General

  • Chapter 9 The Return to Democracy, 1985-1994

  • An Unintended Succession

  • Sarney and the New Democracy

  • The Cruzado Plan

  • The Debt Crisis and the Economy

  • Lost Investment and a Brain Drain

  • Widening Gaps between Rich and Poor

  • Education and Medical Care

  • Roads and Communications

  • Public Health: A Success Story

  • Changes Affecting Women

  • Race Relations

  • The Political Spectrum in the New Democracy

  • The Left

  • The Right

  • The Center

  • The Armed Forces

  • Presidential Elections

  • New Policies

  • The End

  • Another Vice President in Command

  • Back to Stabilization: The Plano Real

  • The Presidential Election of 1994

  • Chapter 10 Consolidating Democracy, 1994-2006

  • The Cardoso Government's First Term

  • More Economic Problems

  • A Second Term in Office

  • Social Justice Delayed

  • On-going Challenges

  • The Presidential Race

  • Lula's Governmental Team

  • The PT in Power

  • Exports Take Center Stage

  • Poverty Alleviation and Education Enhancement

  • The PT Tastes Scandal

  • The Last Year of Lula's First Term

  • Prisons Riots

  • 2006 Elections

  • Chapter 11 A Nation Polarized, 2006-present

  • Lula Reaches New Heights

  • Recognition Abroad

  • Continuity at Home

  • Presidenta in Power

  • The 2013 Protests

  • Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato)

  • A Fourth PT Term

  • A Conservative Tidal Wave

  • The Impeachment of Dilma Rousseff

  • Temer government

  • Lula Ensnared

  • The 2018 Election

  • The Past Returns

  • Suggestions for Further Reading

  • Film, History, Culture, and Society

  • Index

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Genre: Geschichte
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 384
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780190068981
ISBN-10: 0190068981
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Green, James
Skidmore, Thomas E. Carlos Manuel de Cespedes of Modern Latin American History
Hersteller: Oxford University Press Inc
Maße: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Von/Mit: James Green (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 07.09.2021
Gewicht: 0,5 kg
preigu-id: 127270699
Über den Autor
James Green is Carlos Manuel de Céspedes Professor of Modern Latin American History at Brown University

Thomas E. Skidmore was one of the foremost American scholars of Brazil and the former Carlos Manuel de Céspedes Professor of Latin American History at Brown University
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • List of Exhibits and Images

  • Preface

  • Introduction Why Read a History of Brazil?

  • Chapter 1 The Making of Colonial Brazil, 1500-1694

  • The First Occupants of the Land

  • Everyday Life, War, and Rituals

  • Portuguese Overseas Expansion

  • Early Consolidation of the Portuguese Monarchy

  • Setting up a Global Trading Network

  • The Portuguese Encounter Land to the West

  • First European Impressions

  • Portuguese Land Claims

  • Brazilwood and Indigenous Slavery

  • Go-betweens

  • Imperial Reorganization

  • French Claims

  • The Sugar Industry

  • Enslaved Africans

  • Resistance to Slavery

  • Unification of Spain and Portugal

  • Dutch Occupation of the Northeast

  • Emergence of the Myth of the Bandeirante

  • Imperial Control

  • Gold

  • Chapter 2 A New Colonial Order, 1695-1821

  • Manumission of slaves

  • Religious Orders

  • Conflicts in the Mining Region

  • Tensions in the Northeast

  • Pombaline Reforms

  • Indigenous Resistance

  • The Influence of Enlightenment Ideas

  • The Mineira Conspiracy

  • Tailors' Revolt in Salvador

  • The Portuguese Court Comes to Brazil

  • Creating a New Portuguese America

  • Indigenous Resistance

  • Pernambuco Revolution, 1817

  • A Portuguese Revolt and its Impact on Brazil

  • Chapter 3 Independent Brazil and the Consolidation of a Nation, 1822-1850

  • Brazilian Hierarchies

  • A Constitution

  • The Emperor's Tribulations

  • The Regency

  • Regional Revolts

  • Recentralization

  • Pedro II as Emperor

  • The Rise of Coffee

  • Land Ownership

  • Growing Challenges to Slavery

  • Chapter 4 Late Imperial Brazil, 1851-1889

  • Gradually Ending Slavery

  • The Emperor and His Pedestal

  • The Paraguayan War

  • The Effects of the War

  • The Viscount of Mauá

  • The Great Drought and the Amazon Rubber Boom

  • New Roles for Middle-class Women

  • Positivism, Republicanism, and the Military Question

  • The Move toward Abolition

  • Immigration

  • The End of the Empire

  • Chapter 5 Republican Brazil, 1889-1929

  • Modernizing Brazil"

  • Whitening Brazil

  • The Reality behind the Façade

  • Indigenous Brazil

  • Coffee Price Fluctuations and Emerging Industry

  • The Roots of Industrialization

  • Worker Organization and Employers' Strategy

  • Evaporation of the Oligarchical Consensus

  • A Message from Below

  • Economic Strains

  • The Shock of World War I

  • The Economy after the War

  • Brazil's Uneven Development

  • Rebellion in the Army

  • The Modern Woman and an Emerging Feminist Movement

  • Modernism, Brazilian Style

  • Rise of Anti-Liberal Thought

  • The Disintegration of the Old Politics

  • The Revolution of 1930

  • Chapter 6 Getúlio Vargas in Power, 1930-45

  • Swing toward Centralization

  • Electoral rights

  • Ideological Polarization

  • Getúlio Vargas as Dictator

  • The Vargas Style

  • Corporatist Inroads

  • A New Search for National Identity

  • Juggling the International Options

  • World War II and the Rise of U.S. Influence

  • Brazil and the War Effort

  • Collapse of the Dictatorship at Home

  • Chapter 7 Experiments in Democracy, 1946-64

  • The 1945 Election and the Dutra Period

  • Vargas Returns

  • From Oligarch to Populist

  • Vargas's Legislative Program Runs into Trouble

  • Vargas's Demise

  • Suicide

  • Population Growth, Regional Disequilibria, and Migration

  • A New President, Juscelino Kubitschek, Elected

  • Political Strategy

  • The Economic Development Program

  • A New Capital

  • Dealing with the World Economy

  • The Brief Presidency of Jânio Quadros

  • The Succession of João Goulart

  • Populists versus the Military

  • Brazilian Culture

  • The National Union of Students

  • The Economic Crisis Escalates

  • Chapter 8 Rule of the Military, 1964-1985

  • The Generals in Power

  • Growing Repression, Growing Opposition

  • Strengthening the Military Regime

  • Indigenous Policy under Military Rule

  • Growing Opposition

  • Crackdown

  • The Economic Miracle

  • Hyper-Nationalism

  • The Arrival of the Guerrillas

  • Cultural Resistance

  • Mass Media during the Dictatorship

  • The Use of Torture

  • Exile

  • An Economic Turn for the Worse

  • The Winners and Losers

  • The Road to Redemocratization

  • Manipulating the Electoral System and Continued Repression

  • New Social Movements

  • The Working Class Takes Center Stage

  • The Last General

  • Chapter 9 The Return to Democracy, 1985-1994

  • An Unintended Succession

  • Sarney and the New Democracy

  • The Cruzado Plan

  • The Debt Crisis and the Economy

  • Lost Investment and a Brain Drain

  • Widening Gaps between Rich and Poor

  • Education and Medical Care

  • Roads and Communications

  • Public Health: A Success Story

  • Changes Affecting Women

  • Race Relations

  • The Political Spectrum in the New Democracy

  • The Left

  • The Right

  • The Center

  • The Armed Forces

  • Presidential Elections

  • New Policies

  • The End

  • Another Vice President in Command

  • Back to Stabilization: The Plano Real

  • The Presidential Election of 1994

  • Chapter 10 Consolidating Democracy, 1994-2006

  • The Cardoso Government's First Term

  • More Economic Problems

  • A Second Term in Office

  • Social Justice Delayed

  • On-going Challenges

  • The Presidential Race

  • Lula's Governmental Team

  • The PT in Power

  • Exports Take Center Stage

  • Poverty Alleviation and Education Enhancement

  • The PT Tastes Scandal

  • The Last Year of Lula's First Term

  • Prisons Riots

  • 2006 Elections

  • Chapter 11 A Nation Polarized, 2006-present

  • Lula Reaches New Heights

  • Recognition Abroad

  • Continuity at Home

  • Presidenta in Power

  • The 2013 Protests

  • Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato)

  • A Fourth PT Term

  • A Conservative Tidal Wave

  • The Impeachment of Dilma Rousseff

  • Temer government

  • Lula Ensnared

  • The 2018 Election

  • The Past Returns

  • Suggestions for Further Reading

  • Film, History, Culture, and Society

  • Index

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Genre: Geschichte
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 384
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780190068981
ISBN-10: 0190068981
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Green, James
Skidmore, Thomas E. Carlos Manuel de Cespedes of Modern Latin American History
Hersteller: Oxford University Press Inc
Maße: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Von/Mit: James Green (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 07.09.2021
Gewicht: 0,5 kg
preigu-id: 127270699
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