
The meanings of work – 25 years
By RICARDO ANTUNES: Author's introduction to the newly released edition of the book
By RICARDO ANTUNES: Author's introduction to the newly released edition of the book
By RENATO ORTIZ: Charm hides something, its appeal comes from concealment, the undisclosed secret; it speaks between the lines, it contains a certain indeterminacy
By HENRIQUE AMORIM & GUILHERME: The indication of an industrial platform capitalism, instead of being an attempt to introduce a new concept or notion, aims, in practice, to point out what is being reproduced, even if in
By WANDERSON CHAVES: Seeking new positions of open and productive conflict, and breaking with the traditions of action of Brazilian social thought, is a condition for freedom and anti-racist alliances on the left.
By FLORESTAN FERNANDES: “I lived in his house and wanted to leave there, I said that I felt sick, that I ate badly, slept badly and everything was going wrong, and she didn't believe me”
By MARCONI SEVERO: Who came first, the peasant, the family farmer, the settler, the countryman, the farmhand, etc.? Are they different categories used to identify the same individual or do they correspond to different individuals?
By FABIO DE OLIVEIRA MALDONADO: Presentation of the Brazilian edition of the recently released book by Jaime Osorio
By LUIZ GONZAGA BELLUZZO: The evolution of industry and its impact on contemporary economies
By RENATO ORTIZ: The Internet is not a community space, due to its global dimension it operates through the segmentation of groups (correlated to market segmentation)
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Economic nationalists want to return to a mythical past marked by American industrial splendor, while the technological camp imagines a utopian future managed by artificial intelligence
By AFRANIO CATANI: Commentary on the book by Pierre Bourdieu and Alain Darbel
By FABIANE ALBUQUERQUE: For long centuries, knowledge produced by white men was considered “neutral” and “disembodied”, and therefore complete, rational and scientific, while knowledge produced by women was considered passionate.
By JOSÉ MICAELSON LACERDA MORAIS: Commentary on Shoshana Zuboff's book.
By ELIZAIARY ANDRADE: Critical, judicious thinking seems to fade, submerge, go out of fashion to give way to a subject that only replicates and follows false information from a society that accelerates and expands its own autophagy
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Income and wealth inequality is insurmountable, however, educational inequality can be alleviated by leveling up, reducing the first
By CARLOS EDUARDO ARAÚJO: Byung-Chul Han's work, by varnishing its message with seductive rhetoric, becomes a product of cultural consumption that, although it seems critical, reinforces the logic of domination and exploitation.
By MICHEL AIRES DE SOUZA DIAS: The State currently not only kills poor and black people in the outskirts, but also prevents the most humble populations from accessing essential public services.
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 FRANCISCO PEREIRA DE FARIAS: The leaders of financial-banking capital sought to shift the center of hegemony in the State apparatus, transferring it from the Executive to the Legislative
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Possession of any university degree is no longer such a strong differentiator and professions that require more education are now facing greater competition.
By RICARDO ANTUNES: Author's introduction to the newly released edition of the book
By RENATO ORTIZ: Charm hides something, its appeal comes from concealment, the undisclosed secret; it speaks between the lines, it contains a certain indeterminacy
By HENRIQUE AMORIM & GUILHERME: The indication of an industrial platform capitalism, instead of being an attempt to introduce a new concept or notion, aims, in practice, to point out what is being reproduced, even if in
By WANDERSON CHAVES: Seeking new positions of open and productive conflict, and breaking with the traditions of action of Brazilian social thought, is a condition for freedom and anti-racist alliances on the left.
By FLORESTAN FERNANDES: “I lived in his house and wanted to leave there, I said that I felt sick, that I ate badly, slept badly and everything was going wrong, and she didn't believe me”
By MARCONI SEVERO: Who came first, the peasant, the family farmer, the settler, the countryman, the farmhand, etc.? Are they different categories used to identify the same individual or do they correspond to different individuals?
By FABIO DE OLIVEIRA MALDONADO: Presentation of the Brazilian edition of the recently released book by Jaime Osorio
By LUIZ GONZAGA BELLUZZO: The evolution of industry and its impact on contemporary economies
By RENATO ORTIZ: The Internet is not a community space, due to its global dimension it operates through the segmentation of groups (correlated to market segmentation)
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Economic nationalists want to return to a mythical past marked by American industrial splendor, while the technological camp imagines a utopian future managed by artificial intelligence
By AFRANIO CATANI: Commentary on the book by Pierre Bourdieu and Alain Darbel
By FABIANE ALBUQUERQUE: For long centuries, knowledge produced by white men was considered “neutral” and “disembodied”, and therefore complete, rational and scientific, while knowledge produced by women was considered passionate.
By JOSÉ MICAELSON LACERDA MORAIS: Commentary on Shoshana Zuboff's book.
By ELIZAIARY ANDRADE: Critical, judicious thinking seems to fade, submerge, go out of fashion to give way to a subject that only replicates and follows false information from a society that accelerates and expands its own autophagy
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Income and wealth inequality is insurmountable, however, educational inequality can be alleviated by leveling up, reducing the first
By CARLOS EDUARDO ARAÚJO: Byung-Chul Han's work, by varnishing its message with seductive rhetoric, becomes a product of cultural consumption that, although it seems critical, reinforces the logic of domination and exploitation.
By MICHEL AIRES DE SOUZA DIAS: The State currently not only kills poor and black people in the outskirts, but also prevents the most humble populations from accessing essential public services.
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 FRANCISCO PEREIRA DE FARIAS: The leaders of financial-banking capital sought to shift the center of hegemony in the State apparatus, transferring it from the Executive to the Legislative
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Possession of any university degree is no longer such a strong differentiator and professions that require more education are now facing greater competition.