
Three nationalisms in Latin America
By CLAUDIO KATZ: The four governments that currently constitute the axis of radical governments (Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba) are systematically attacked by US imperialism
By CLAUDIO KATZ: The four governments that currently constitute the axis of radical governments (Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba) are systematically attacked by US imperialism
By JOÃO LANARI BO: Commentary on Jamie Roberts' documentary “Four hours at the Capitol”
By DANIEL AFONSO DA SILVA: Neither Donald Trump nor Kamala Harris seem to be up to the challenges
By JOSÉ TAVARES CORREIA DE LIRA: The granting of a posthumous honorary diploma to a former student of the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism at USP
By ANDRÉ CASTRO: Caetano seems to see that there is something deeper in the evangelical religious experience than the image of being “bridled” by domineering and malicious pastors
By EDERGÊNIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: The traumas that sudden absence produces give rise to several heads in this Hydra of Lerna, called violence
By MICHAEL LÖWY: Reflections on the occasion of the centenary of his “First Manifesto”
By DENÍLSON BOTELHO:
It is only possible to understand Lima Barreto's militancy by contextualizing it within the political and ideological conflicts in which the writer intended to participate.
By JEAN MARC VON DER WEID: The Supreme Federal Court decides between the country and agribusiness
By JEFFERSON FERREIRA DO NASCIMENTO & MARIA DO SOCORRO SOUSA BRAGA: The extreme right and part of the traditional right have adopted an anti-systemic and reformist discourse, associated with moral conservatism and economic neoliberalism
By RONALD LEÓN NÚÑEZ: The apparent and the essential in the interpretation of the War against Paraguay
By CARLOS DE NICOLA: As the Brazilian left has a structural difficulty in vocalizing possible solutions, “morbid symptoms” are embodied in characters, and compete for the popular imagination in a regressive way
By EUGÊNIO BUCCI: Antonio Cicero, who lived in Rio de Janeiro, took his last breath in Zurich. And what about those who don't have the money to cross the Atlantic and pay for services?
By KOHEI SAITO: Author's Introduction and Conclusion of the newly published book
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: The Nation of Islam suffered the consequences of the crime it committed by assassinating Malcolm X, stagnating as a sectarian religious group, as it remains to this day.
By HENRIQUE BRAGA & MARCELO MÓDOLO: From Caetano Veloso to divergent templates
By MATEUS MENDES: Brazil's veto on Venezuela comes from a mistaken conviction, based on a minimalist conception of democracy and a mistaken reading of the international situation
By LUIZ EDUARDO SIMÕES DE SOUZA:
Considerations on the political trajectories of Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira and Fernando Haddad
By JEANNE MARIE GAGNEBIN: How can Franz Kafka's texts, which are often interpreted as expressions of absurdity or despair, instead be read by Walter Benjamin as figures of hope [espoir]?
By VINÍCIUS SÃO PEDRO: “The mysterious vocalizations kept everyone awake, filled with a kind of indignation, disturbing and feverish”
By CLAUDIO KATZ: The four governments that currently constitute the axis of radical governments (Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba) are systematically attacked by US imperialism
By JOÃO LANARI BO: Commentary on Jamie Roberts' documentary “Four hours at the Capitol”
By DANIEL AFONSO DA SILVA: Neither Donald Trump nor Kamala Harris seem to be up to the challenges
By JOSÉ TAVARES CORREIA DE LIRA: The granting of a posthumous honorary diploma to a former student of the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism at USP
By ANDRÉ CASTRO: Caetano seems to see that there is something deeper in the evangelical religious experience than the image of being “bridled” by domineering and malicious pastors
By EDERGÊNIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: The traumas that sudden absence produces give rise to several heads in this Hydra of Lerna, called violence
By MICHAEL LÖWY: Reflections on the occasion of the centenary of his “First Manifesto”
By DENÍLSON BOTELHO:
It is only possible to understand Lima Barreto's militancy by contextualizing it within the political and ideological conflicts in which the writer intended to participate.
By JEAN MARC VON DER WEID: The Supreme Federal Court decides between the country and agribusiness
By JEFFERSON FERREIRA DO NASCIMENTO & MARIA DO SOCORRO SOUSA BRAGA: The extreme right and part of the traditional right have adopted an anti-systemic and reformist discourse, associated with moral conservatism and economic neoliberalism
By RONALD LEÓN NÚÑEZ: The apparent and the essential in the interpretation of the War against Paraguay
By CARLOS DE NICOLA: As the Brazilian left has a structural difficulty in vocalizing possible solutions, “morbid symptoms” are embodied in characters, and compete for the popular imagination in a regressive way
By EUGÊNIO BUCCI: Antonio Cicero, who lived in Rio de Janeiro, took his last breath in Zurich. And what about those who don't have the money to cross the Atlantic and pay for services?
By KOHEI SAITO: Author's Introduction and Conclusion of the newly published book
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: The Nation of Islam suffered the consequences of the crime it committed by assassinating Malcolm X, stagnating as a sectarian religious group, as it remains to this day.
By HENRIQUE BRAGA & MARCELO MÓDOLO: From Caetano Veloso to divergent templates
By MATEUS MENDES: Brazil's veto on Venezuela comes from a mistaken conviction, based on a minimalist conception of democracy and a mistaken reading of the international situation
By LUIZ EDUARDO SIMÕES DE SOUZA:
Considerations on the political trajectories of Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira and Fernando Haddad
By JEANNE MARIE GAGNEBIN: How can Franz Kafka's texts, which are often interpreted as expressions of absurdity or despair, instead be read by Walter Benjamin as figures of hope [espoir]?
By VINÍCIUS SÃO PEDRO: “The mysterious vocalizations kept everyone awake, filled with a kind of indignation, disturbing and feverish”