
The age of error
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: There is an almost shallow morality permeating the idea that, in general, in everyday life, it is much easier to be wrong than to be right.
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: There is an almost shallow morality permeating the idea that, in general, in everyday life, it is much easier to be wrong than to be right.
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: One of the most perverse sequels of slavery – of racism, by metonymy – is the affective dullness that so commonly silences us
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: Brazilian racism is such, so perverse and disguised, that we run the risk of the background taking the place of the figure
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The constant feeling of imminent risk makes us stay alert, looking all the time for any sign of a threat against us.
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The power of the people is diverted in favor of capital
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
Comment on the documentary with Emicida as the protagonist
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: Education is the necessary source of any possibility of freeing ourselves from the barbarity that surrounds us
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: As absurd and complicated as it may be, it is necessary to find concrete ways to demonstrate and convince once and for all as many people as possible about the spherical shape of the planet
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The planned investment in cross-cultural communicational educational practices is built from the point of view that understands knowledge and power as a result of multiple discursive constructions
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The best chance of achieving, in Brazil, a plausible form of civility, stricto sensu, lies in the real investment in communicational educational practices that are, by principle and method, transcultural and empathetic
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: We live in a racist, sexist, homophobic and elitist country: few of us escape all these scrutiny unscathed, and this makes us much more like our students
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: The political crisis in Brazil is the result of centuries of failures – or perhaps successes – in the various national educational projects. These failures hit, sooner or later, both the anonymous and the famous,
By Luciano Nascimento: It is essential to look at things as they are: for a significant portion of the population, the president tells the truth
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: There is an almost shallow morality permeating the idea that, in general, in everyday life, it is much easier to be wrong than to be right.
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: One of the most perverse sequels of slavery – of racism, by metonymy – is the affective dullness that so commonly silences us
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: Brazilian racism is such, so perverse and disguised, that we run the risk of the background taking the place of the figure
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The constant feeling of imminent risk makes us stay alert, looking all the time for any sign of a threat against us.
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The power of the people is diverted in favor of capital
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
Comment on the documentary with Emicida as the protagonist
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: Education is the necessary source of any possibility of freeing ourselves from the barbarity that surrounds us
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: As absurd and complicated as it may be, it is necessary to find concrete ways to demonstrate and convince once and for all as many people as possible about the spherical shape of the planet
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The planned investment in cross-cultural communicational educational practices is built from the point of view that understands knowledge and power as a result of multiple discursive constructions
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO:
The best chance of achieving, in Brazil, a plausible form of civility, stricto sensu, lies in the real investment in communicational educational practices that are, by principle and method, transcultural and empathetic
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: We live in a racist, sexist, homophobic and elitist country: few of us escape all these scrutiny unscathed, and this makes us much more like our students
By LUCIANO NASCIMENTO: The political crisis in Brazil is the result of centuries of failures – or perhaps successes – in the various national educational projects. These failures hit, sooner or later, both the anonymous and the famous,
By Luciano Nascimento: It is essential to look at things as they are: for a significant portion of the population, the president tells the truth