
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
PodCast:
With Maria Rita Kehl and Ismail Xavier and mediation by Ricardo Musse. The actuality of this concept for understanding both individual identity and social and political life.
By Leonardo Boff:
Human beings are the greatest threat to life on Earth. They accumulate means of destruction in which, in 2019 alone, one trillion and 822 billion dollars were invested: lethal weapons, completely ineffective in the face of the invisible.
By Artur Kon:
Commentary on the theatrical work, by the Austrian writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2019
By Juliana Paula Magalhães:
Analysis of Provisional Measure n. 936, of April 1, 2020, which signals the alignment of the federal government with the immediate interests of capital owners
By Carlos Tautz:
If the private financial system in Brazil depends on massive injections of public resources, it is because it does not have the competence to establish itself
By Walnice Nogueira Galvão:
Commentary on the film by Win Wenders that features hitherto inactive and “forgotten” Cuban musicians
By José Luís Fiori:
Unlike wars, epidemics do not destroy physical equipment, nor do they have a visible opponent capable of producing a collective, emotional identity, and national solidarity that imposes itself above social classes.
By Joao Adolfo Hansen:
Commentary on a Detective Novel and a Book of Short Stories by the Recently Deceased Writer
By João Feres Junior:
a possible mea culpa of the PT would be a bad example for the political education of Brazilians, it would be an endorsement of the mystifying media narrative of the criminalization of politics
By Raoul Vaneigem:
The catastrophic management of catastrophism is inherent to the world-dominant financial capitalism, and today it is fought worldwide in the name of life, the planet and the species to be saved.
By Tomasz Konicz:
The coronavirus is nothing more than a trigger that threatens to collapse an unstable system.
By Flávio Aguiar:
Bolsonaro, like Hermógenes, the character of Grande Sertão:Veredas, when doing business with the Devil, becomes himself part of the identity of the Evil One
By Ana Paula Fragnani Colombi and Gustavo Moura de Cacalcanti Mello:
In the name of controlling the coronavirus pandemic, what lies ahead is the extension of the neoliberal pandemic
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
PodCast:
With Maria Rita Kehl and Ismail Xavier and mediation by Ricardo Musse. The actuality of this concept for understanding both individual identity and social and political life.
By Leonardo Boff:
Human beings are the greatest threat to life on Earth. They accumulate means of destruction in which, in 2019 alone, one trillion and 822 billion dollars were invested: lethal weapons, completely ineffective in the face of the invisible.
By Artur Kon:
Commentary on the theatrical work, by the Austrian writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2019
By Juliana Paula Magalhães:
Analysis of Provisional Measure n. 936, of April 1, 2020, which signals the alignment of the federal government with the immediate interests of capital owners
By Carlos Tautz:
If the private financial system in Brazil depends on massive injections of public resources, it is because it does not have the competence to establish itself
By Walnice Nogueira Galvão:
Commentary on the film by Win Wenders that features hitherto inactive and “forgotten” Cuban musicians
By José Luís Fiori:
Unlike wars, epidemics do not destroy physical equipment, nor do they have a visible opponent capable of producing a collective, emotional identity, and national solidarity that imposes itself above social classes.
By Joao Adolfo Hansen:
Commentary on a Detective Novel and a Book of Short Stories by the Recently Deceased Writer
By João Feres Junior:
a possible mea culpa of the PT would be a bad example for the political education of Brazilians, it would be an endorsement of the mystifying media narrative of the criminalization of politics
By Raoul Vaneigem:
The catastrophic management of catastrophism is inherent to the world-dominant financial capitalism, and today it is fought worldwide in the name of life, the planet and the species to be saved.
By Tomasz Konicz:
The coronavirus is nothing more than a trigger that threatens to collapse an unstable system.
By Flávio Aguiar:
Bolsonaro, like Hermógenes, the character of Grande Sertão:Veredas, when doing business with the Devil, becomes himself part of the identity of the Evil One
By Ana Paula Fragnani Colombi and Gustavo Moura de Cacalcanti Mello:
In the name of controlling the coronavirus pandemic, what lies ahead is the extension of the neoliberal pandemic