Synopses & Reviews
Race, religion, language, culture, and national character are full of contradictions. Brazil, the largest country in South America, embodies so much paradox that it defies neat description. This book will help students and general readers dispel stereotypes of Brazil and begin to understand what country's bigness means in terms of its land, people, history, society, and cultural expressions.
This is the only authoritative yet accessible volume on Brazil that surveys a wide range of important topics, from geography, to social customs, art, architecture, and more. Highlights include discussions of the fluid definitions of race, rituals of candomble, the importance of extended family networks, beach culture, and soccer madness. A chronology and glossary supplement the text.
Synopsis
Includes bibliographical references ([181]-184) and index.
Synopsis
The vastness of Brazil, and the contradictions of its national culture, are authoritatively yet accessibly presented.
Synopsis
Brazil, the largest country in South America, embodies so much paradox that it defies neat description. This book will help students and general readers dispel stereotypes of Brazil and begin to understand what country's "bigness" means in terms of its land, people, history, society, and cultural expressions.
About the Author
JON S. VINCENT was a Professor of Portuguese in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Kansas, Lawrence.
Table of Contents
Series Foreword
Preface
Introduction
Chronology
Geography
Race, Ethnicity, and Class
Language
History
Religion
Social Customs by Margo Milleret
Print Media and Broadcasting by Mark A. Dinneen
Cinema by Jon Tolman
Literature
Art and Architecture
Bibliography
Index