
Darcy Ribeiro
By ANDRÉ LEMOS: Darcy Ribeiro, an icon of 'doing' in Brazil, left an indelible legacy in education and in the fight for a more just society, integrating thought and practice in favor of social transformation
By ANDRÉ LEMOS: Darcy Ribeiro, an icon of 'doing' in Brazil, left an indelible legacy in education and in the fight for a more just society, integrating thought and practice in favor of social transformation
By DANIEL L. JEZIORNY: The fallacy that turns biodiversity into a commodity and perpetuates environmental injustice, while agribusiness and financial capital profit from the climate crisis they helped create
By RENATO ORTIZ: From colonial violence to racist determinism: the invention of the 'barbarian' and the pseudosciences of the 19th century created implausible but effective narratives to justify domination, sacralizing European barbarity and naturalizing the extermination of the Other
By ALINE MOREIRA MAGALHÃES: A Jewish nationalist project would not be problematic if it were not supremacist
By RICARDO EVANDRO S. MARTINS: In history, and even in contemporary politics, compliance with Christian ethics has been far from being a reality on the part of those who claim to be followers of its faith.
By ANDRÉ LEMOS: It is important to recognize that traditional communities of Afro-Brazilian origin, incorporated into their religions, have components that legitimize them as social spaces of care and health.
By FABIANO DE SOUZA GONTIJO: Foreword to the recently released book by Marina Ramos Neves de Castro
By WALNICE NOGUEIRA GALVÃO: In total, USP has 39 deaths, across all faculties and including 6 professors and 2 employees
By RICARDO EVANDRO S. MARTINS: In Brazilian Carnival, the true parody is the reality that is being parodied.
In this interview we discuss his latest book, What is Identitarianism, seeking to understand why Douglas understands it as a “subjectively necessary illusion” and why identitarianism has become such a relevant subject.
By DANIEL COSTA*: The characters of Vai-Vai are a synthesis of the Bixiga neighborhood, especially the part of the neighborhood that continues to resist the attacks that try to decharacterize the traditional region of São Paulo.
By RENATO ORTIZ: The sociological subject can “speak” about the most diverse topics, but without forgetting that he does not have the monopoly of the interpretation of the social
By FÁBIO FONSECA DE CASTRO: In Pará, a project is underway to empty the territories and identities of traditional populations in the state
By LETÍCIA NÚÑEZ ALMEIDA: Considerations on the recently released book by Luiz Eduardo Soares
By DANIEL SANTIAGO B. DA SILVA: The ideal of whiteness is forcibly imposed on people in Brazilian society and institutions
By UGO RIVETTI: For those who immigrated, the past returns, in the end, with full force, in conversations and in deliriums in bed. And, in the end experienced by those who remain, there remains the unusual suspicion that they may rest on earth
By MOHAMMED ELHAJJI: Presentation of the newly released book by Mario Luis Grangeia
By RENATO ORTIZ: Someone without a shadow would have gotten rid of the dark temptations, the stain that corrupts us, it would no longer be necessary to wear the mask that distorts us before the complacent gaze of others, disguising what we really are.
By MARCELO BARBOZA DUARTE: Symbolic and figurative practices as instruments of appropriation of the other and their qualities
By ANDRÉ LEMOS: Darcy Ribeiro, an icon of 'doing' in Brazil, left an indelible legacy in education and in the fight for a more just society, integrating thought and practice in favor of social transformation
By DANIEL L. JEZIORNY: The fallacy that turns biodiversity into a commodity and perpetuates environmental injustice, while agribusiness and financial capital profit from the climate crisis they helped create
By RENATO ORTIZ: From colonial violence to racist determinism: the invention of the 'barbarian' and the pseudosciences of the 19th century created implausible but effective narratives to justify domination, sacralizing European barbarity and naturalizing the extermination of the Other
By ALINE MOREIRA MAGALHÃES: A Jewish nationalist project would not be problematic if it were not supremacist
By RICARDO EVANDRO S. MARTINS: In history, and even in contemporary politics, compliance with Christian ethics has been far from being a reality on the part of those who claim to be followers of its faith.
By ANDRÉ LEMOS: It is important to recognize that traditional communities of Afro-Brazilian origin, incorporated into their religions, have components that legitimize them as social spaces of care and health.
By FABIANO DE SOUZA GONTIJO: Foreword to the recently released book by Marina Ramos Neves de Castro
By WALNICE NOGUEIRA GALVÃO: In total, USP has 39 deaths, across all faculties and including 6 professors and 2 employees
By RICARDO EVANDRO S. MARTINS: In Brazilian Carnival, the true parody is the reality that is being parodied.
In this interview we discuss his latest book, What is Identitarianism, seeking to understand why Douglas understands it as a “subjectively necessary illusion” and why identitarianism has become such a relevant subject.
By DANIEL COSTA*: The characters of Vai-Vai are a synthesis of the Bixiga neighborhood, especially the part of the neighborhood that continues to resist the attacks that try to decharacterize the traditional region of São Paulo.
By RENATO ORTIZ: The sociological subject can “speak” about the most diverse topics, but without forgetting that he does not have the monopoly of the interpretation of the social
By FÁBIO FONSECA DE CASTRO: In Pará, a project is underway to empty the territories and identities of traditional populations in the state
By LETÍCIA NÚÑEZ ALMEIDA: Considerations on the recently released book by Luiz Eduardo Soares
By DANIEL SANTIAGO B. DA SILVA: The ideal of whiteness is forcibly imposed on people in Brazilian society and institutions
By UGO RIVETTI: For those who immigrated, the past returns, in the end, with full force, in conversations and in deliriums in bed. And, in the end experienced by those who remain, there remains the unusual suspicion that they may rest on earth
By MOHAMMED ELHAJJI: Presentation of the newly released book by Mario Luis Grangeia
By RENATO ORTIZ: Someone without a shadow would have gotten rid of the dark temptations, the stain that corrupts us, it would no longer be necessary to wear the mask that distorts us before the complacent gaze of others, disguising what we really are.
By MARCELO BARBOZA DUARTE: Symbolic and figurative practices as instruments of appropriation of the other and their qualities