
The objectified entrepreneurs
By Joelma Pires:
It is with the privatization of the public sphere that the inequality and social injustice that generates the plague is aggravated.
By Joelma Pires:
It is with the privatization of the public sphere that the inequality and social injustice that generates the plague is aggravated.
By Antônio SalesRios Neto:
The source of all of today's problems is the gap between how we think and how nature works.
Podcast:
With João Adolfo Hansen and Celso Favaretto; mediation by Ricardo Musse. The aesthetic treatment of the question in the work of Camus and in the Decameron. The aporias of the contemporary representation of the pandemic.
By Lincoln Secco:
Commentary on the classic film by Ingmar Bergman, awarded the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival.
By CEFEMEA:
Structural violence is camouflaged by its conformity to rules; it is naturalized by its permanent presence in the fabric of social relations; it is made invisible because, unlike open violence, it does not appear as a rupture of normality.
By Rafael R. Ioris & Antonio AR Ioris:
It is essential to think critically and courageously not only about post-crisis Brazil, but about the deeper consequences of a dystopian post-Brazil that is looming on the horizon
By Joelma Pires:
It is with the privatization of the public sphere that the inequality and social injustice that generates the plague is aggravated.
By Antônio SalesRios Neto:
The source of all of today's problems is the gap between how we think and how nature works.
Podcast:
With João Adolfo Hansen and Celso Favaretto; mediation by Ricardo Musse. The aesthetic treatment of the question in the work of Camus and in the Decameron. The aporias of the contemporary representation of the pandemic.
By Lincoln Secco:
Commentary on the classic film by Ingmar Bergman, awarded the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival.
By CEFEMEA:
Structural violence is camouflaged by its conformity to rules; it is naturalized by its permanent presence in the fabric of social relations; it is made invisible because, unlike open violence, it does not appear as a rupture of normality.
By Rafael R. Ioris & Antonio AR Ioris:
It is essential to think critically and courageously not only about post-crisis Brazil, but about the deeper consequences of a dystopian post-Brazil that is looming on the horizon