Identity, Whiteness, and Modernity in Barbara Weinstein’s Work

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15448/2178-3748.2022.1.43630

Keywords:

regional identity, history of São Paulo, race and class

Abstract

Barbara Weinstein, in A cor da modernidade: a branquitude e a formação da identidade paulista, discusses historical processes through which an imagined identity of São Paulo was formed. In doing so, Weinstein underscores two major events: the 1932 Rebellion, often alluded to as a “revolution” in the local historiography, as well as the celebrations of the city’s 400th anniversary. The book dialogues with major Brazilian works, both in terms of the historiography of the state, as well as other region-crafting cases. The author highlights the relevance of European immigration-based imaginaries, which sought to differentiate the state from “less developed” areas of Brazil and from neighboring Rio de Janeiro. Going back to revisionist perspectives that reshaped the Bandeirantes not as exploiters of people and the hinterland, but rather as avid settlers who would’ve made longlasting contributions to the state, Weinstein traces back these imaginaries to periods that preceded the capital’s consolidation as the country’s economic powerhouse. As one would expect from a rigorous historical work, Weinstein also underscores difficult and intriguing themes such as the participation of Black soliders in the 1932 events, as well as the role of women at the time. 

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Author Biography

João Gabriel Rabello Sodré, Georgetown University (GU), Washington D.C., Estados Unidos.

Mestre em Políticas Públicas em Direitos Humanos pela Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), no Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil, e em Estudos Globais pela Universidade da Califórnia (UCSB), em Santa Bárbara, Estados Unidos. Doutorando em História pela Georgetown University (GU), em Washington, D.C., Estados Unidos. 

References

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ARAÚJO, Ana Lucia (org.). Politics of Memory: Making Slavery Visible in the Public Space. Nova York: Routledge, 2012. p. 15-34.

BRASHER, Jordan. Contesting the Confederacy: Mobile Memory and the Making of Black Geographies in Brazil. FOCUS on Geography, [S. l.], v. 62, 2019. Disponível em: http://www.focusongeography.org/publications/articles/brazil_confederacy/index.html. Acesso em: 1 ago. 2022.

CARVALHO, Vânia Carneiro de. Gênero e artefato: o sistema doméstico na perspectiva da cultura material: São Paulo, 1870-1920. São Paulo, SP, Brasil: EDUSP, 2008.

SCHWARCZ, Lilia Moritz. Nem preto nem branco, muito pelo contrário: cor e raça na sociabilidade brasileira. São Paulo, SP: Claro Enigma, 2012.

SCHWARCZ, Lilia Moritz. O espetáculo das raças: cientistas, instituições e questão racial no Brasil, 1870-1930. São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 1993.

WEINSTEIN, Barbara. A Cor da Modernidade: A branquitude e a formação da identidade paulista. São Paulo: EDUSP, 2022.

Published

2022-11-21

How to Cite

Sodré, J. G. R. (2022). Identity, Whiteness, and Modernity in Barbara Weinstein’s Work. Oficina Do Historiador, 15(1), e43630. https://doi.org/10.15448/2178-3748.2022.1.43630