
From Tarsila to Oiticica
By LUIZ RENATO MARTINS: The treatment of the issue of space, in the visual scope of modern Brazilian culture, brings together the works of Tarsila do Amaral, Lúcio Costa, Oscar Niemeyer and Roberto Burle Marx
By LUIZ RENATO MARTINS: The treatment of the issue of space, in the visual scope of modern Brazilian culture, brings together the works of Tarsila do Amaral, Lúcio Costa, Oscar Niemeyer and Roberto Burle Marx
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Even after Brazilian politics turned into the horror show it is today, with Jair Bolsonaro and his, opponents seem unprepared for a Pablo Marçal
By JASON HICKEL, MORENA HANBURY LEMOS & FELIX BARBOUR: In the contemporary world economy, value appropriation occurs largely through what has been called “unequal exchange” in international trade
By EVA ALTERMAN BLAY: Violence against women is a tragic symptom in a society on the verge of destroying democracy
By VICTOR SANTOS VIGNERON: This year, important measures to support the Brazilian audiovisual sector were announced, which implies a resumption of public policies for film production
By LINCOLN SECCO: Getúlio Vargas left answers suspended. His faces were that of an apparently unwilling revolutionary, of a voting loyalist, of an anti-communist dictator, of a sincere labor leader
By DENILSON LUÍS WERLE & RÚRION MELO: Presentation to the Brazilian edition of Jürgen Habermas' book
By ERIK CHICONELLI GOMES: Vargas' political trajectory, crossing democratic and authoritarian periods, can only be understood in light of the economic and social transformations that the country was experiencing
By RUBEN BAUER NAVEIRA: The future is always open, and always at the mercy of the unpredictable and the imponderable – especially when it comes to the actions of men
By GILLIAN ROSE: The use that Frankfurt School theorists made of three thinkers: Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud
By VALERIO ARCARY: What prevailed in Brazil, over many generations, were transitions from above, or concertations between bourgeois fractions
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: Vargas must be considered the greatest president of all time for his extraordinary number of great achievements, which left indelible marks
By CAIO HENRIQUE LOPES RAMIRO: A time of the end that at any moment could become the end of time
By OSVALDO COGGIOLA: In the German labor movement, in the second half of the 19th century, divergences between the supporters of Marx and those of Lassalle were manifested
By DÉBORA MAZZA & AFRÂNIO CATANI: Considerations about the Czech photographer’s exhibition, on display in São Paulo
By JOSÉ DIRCEU: The complaint against Moraes showed how much sectors of society and the media try to align themselves with the new face of Bolsonarism, which responds to the name of the governor of São Paulo, Tarcísio de Freitas
By LISZT VIEIRA: The threat of the ecological crisis points to a true crisis of civilization, to the need for a new way of life and production
By LUIZ RENATO MARTINS: The treatment of the issue of space, in the visual scope of modern Brazilian culture, brings together the works of Tarsila do Amaral, Lúcio Costa, Oscar Niemeyer and Roberto Burle Marx
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Even after Brazilian politics turned into the horror show it is today, with Jair Bolsonaro and his, opponents seem unprepared for a Pablo Marçal
By JASON HICKEL, MORENA HANBURY LEMOS & FELIX BARBOUR: In the contemporary world economy, value appropriation occurs largely through what has been called “unequal exchange” in international trade
By EVA ALTERMAN BLAY: Violence against women is a tragic symptom in a society on the verge of destroying democracy
By VICTOR SANTOS VIGNERON: This year, important measures to support the Brazilian audiovisual sector were announced, which implies a resumption of public policies for film production
By LINCOLN SECCO: Getúlio Vargas left answers suspended. His faces were that of an apparently unwilling revolutionary, of a voting loyalist, of an anti-communist dictator, of a sincere labor leader
By DENILSON LUÍS WERLE & RÚRION MELO: Presentation to the Brazilian edition of Jürgen Habermas' book
By ERIK CHICONELLI GOMES: Vargas' political trajectory, crossing democratic and authoritarian periods, can only be understood in light of the economic and social transformations that the country was experiencing
By RUBEN BAUER NAVEIRA: The future is always open, and always at the mercy of the unpredictable and the imponderable – especially when it comes to the actions of men
By GILLIAN ROSE: The use that Frankfurt School theorists made of three thinkers: Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud
By VALERIO ARCARY: What prevailed in Brazil, over many generations, were transitions from above, or concertations between bourgeois fractions
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: Vargas must be considered the greatest president of all time for his extraordinary number of great achievements, which left indelible marks
By CAIO HENRIQUE LOPES RAMIRO: A time of the end that at any moment could become the end of time
By OSVALDO COGGIOLA: In the German labor movement, in the second half of the 19th century, divergences between the supporters of Marx and those of Lassalle were manifested
By DÉBORA MAZZA & AFRÂNIO CATANI: Considerations about the Czech photographer’s exhibition, on display in São Paulo
By JOSÉ DIRCEU: The complaint against Moraes showed how much sectors of society and the media try to align themselves with the new face of Bolsonarism, which responds to the name of the governor of São Paulo, Tarcísio de Freitas
By LISZT VIEIRA: The threat of the ecological crisis points to a true crisis of civilization, to the need for a new way of life and production