
The background to “ethnic cleansing” in Gaza
By FLAVIO AGUIAR: Israel targets “its Jews,” identifying itself not with the heroic struggles of its people, as in the Warsaw Ghetto, but with the abominable practices of its ancestors’ executioners
By FLAVIO AGUIAR: Israel targets “its Jews,” identifying itself not with the heroic struggles of its people, as in the Warsaw Ghetto, but with the abominable practices of its ancestors’ executioners
By TARSUS GENUS: A spa in Gaza is a criminal tomb monument to democracy and freedom, which could only be conceived by those who make necrophilia a high-performance sport
By SOFIA CAMPOS TEIXEIRA: Our rights provided for by the Brazilian constitution only exist on paper and in the demagogic words of false leaders, who set themselves up as protectors of black people on opportune occasions.
By JEAN MARC VON DER WEID: The war is not over and will not end any time soon, regardless of what happens in Gaza.
By OSNAN SILVA DE SOUZA: We are in the presence of a democracy in which the way blacks are treated serves as an inspiration and model for Hitlerism
By DENIS RIZZO MORAIS: Fear of a Haiti-like uprising shaped Brazilian political organization, consolidating elitist control and the exclusion of the majority
By RONALDO PORTO MACEDO JUNIOR: Considerations on the case of USP students threatened with expulsion
By SALEM NASSER: What does it take for someone to see, to perceive, a genocide in progress?
By DANIEL SANTIAGO B. DA SILVA: The ideal of whiteness is forcibly imposed on people in Brazilian society and institutions
By MAURO JUNIOR GRIGGI: More than a legacy of past practices, racism presents itself as a dynamic phenomenon, capable of adapting to new configurations of power and production
By EDERGENIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: Both here and there, racism acts by shaping social and political relations, showing itself in a structural, organic and functional way.
By CHRISTIAN RIBEIRO: Comment on the recently released book by Fabiane Albuquerque
By PETRÔNIO DOMINGUES: Clóvis Moura's work is an original record of black agency in the history of Brazil, questioning the postulates of traditional historiography and sociology.
By ANTONIO BENTO: Every foreigner has his consul who complains about any injustice he may suffer, and the Brazilian, especially the freedman, does not find support and justice here when he asks for it.
By HOMERO VIZEU ARAÚJO: The bourgeois hero and slave trader at the origin of the rise of the novel
By JORGE PRADO TEIXEIRA: Prejudice is not manifested by a frank, sincere, clear attitude, but by inhibiting attitudes, or rather, by means of a skillful psychological game that leads the black man to feel embarrassed and “return to the
By FLAVIO AGUIAR: The regime of racial discrimination instituted from 1948 and known as Apartheid reached a scope and cruel refinement rarely seen in human history.
By JOÃO DOS REIS SILVA JUNIOR: Struggles should never be seen as just gender-based, but as a radical transformation whose goal is to eradicate all forms of oppression, including sexism, racism and class exploitation.
By ANTONIO SEVERIANO: The lamps are not symbolic equivalents of the colonizing violence materialized in the representation of the bandeirante Borba Gato
By FLAVIO AGUIAR: Israel targets “its Jews,” identifying itself not with the heroic struggles of its people, as in the Warsaw Ghetto, but with the abominable practices of its ancestors’ executioners
By TARSUS GENUS: A spa in Gaza is a criminal tomb monument to democracy and freedom, which could only be conceived by those who make necrophilia a high-performance sport
By SOFIA CAMPOS TEIXEIRA: Our rights provided for by the Brazilian constitution only exist on paper and in the demagogic words of false leaders, who set themselves up as protectors of black people on opportune occasions.
By JEAN MARC VON DER WEID: The war is not over and will not end any time soon, regardless of what happens in Gaza.
By OSNAN SILVA DE SOUZA: We are in the presence of a democracy in which the way blacks are treated serves as an inspiration and model for Hitlerism
By DENIS RIZZO MORAIS: Fear of a Haiti-like uprising shaped Brazilian political organization, consolidating elitist control and the exclusion of the majority
By RONALDO PORTO MACEDO JUNIOR: Considerations on the case of USP students threatened with expulsion
By SALEM NASSER: What does it take for someone to see, to perceive, a genocide in progress?
By DANIEL SANTIAGO B. DA SILVA: The ideal of whiteness is forcibly imposed on people in Brazilian society and institutions
By MAURO JUNIOR GRIGGI: More than a legacy of past practices, racism presents itself as a dynamic phenomenon, capable of adapting to new configurations of power and production
By EDERGENIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: Both here and there, racism acts by shaping social and political relations, showing itself in a structural, organic and functional way.
By CHRISTIAN RIBEIRO: Comment on the recently released book by Fabiane Albuquerque
By PETRÔNIO DOMINGUES: Clóvis Moura's work is an original record of black agency in the history of Brazil, questioning the postulates of traditional historiography and sociology.
By ANTONIO BENTO: Every foreigner has his consul who complains about any injustice he may suffer, and the Brazilian, especially the freedman, does not find support and justice here when he asks for it.
By HOMERO VIZEU ARAÚJO: The bourgeois hero and slave trader at the origin of the rise of the novel
By JORGE PRADO TEIXEIRA: Prejudice is not manifested by a frank, sincere, clear attitude, but by inhibiting attitudes, or rather, by means of a skillful psychological game that leads the black man to feel embarrassed and “return to the
By FLAVIO AGUIAR: The regime of racial discrimination instituted from 1948 and known as Apartheid reached a scope and cruel refinement rarely seen in human history.
By JOÃO DOS REIS SILVA JUNIOR: Struggles should never be seen as just gender-based, but as a radical transformation whose goal is to eradicate all forms of oppression, including sexism, racism and class exploitation.
By ANTONIO SEVERIANO: The lamps are not symbolic equivalents of the colonizing violence materialized in the representation of the bandeirante Borba Gato