Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-m42fx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T16:44:43.287Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Brazil and Portuguese Africa in Comparative Perspective: University of California Colloquim (January-March 1968)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2022

Ronald H. Chilcote*
Affiliation:
University of California, Riverside
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

There Have Been Few Scholarly Comparisons of Latin America With other areas of the Third World. As a contribution to such comparative study, the University of California Colloquium attempted to examine links between Brazil and Portugal's African territories of Angola, Guinea and the Cape Verdes, and Mozambique. The objectives were to overlap the traditional area boundaries that separate specialists of Latin America and Africa, to focus on common themes from the perspective of varying social science disciplines, and to reassess and evaluate, first, a series of historical cases of crisis, protest, and resistance and, second, nationalist trends and events in relation to patterns of change and development. The specialized essays were to be analytical and exploratory, raising questions for possible future research.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © 1969, by Latin American Research Review

Footnotes

*

Professor Chilcote, who organized and coordinated the colloquium, is editing for publication the book of essays that will ensue.

A list of the papers by authors in alphabetical order appears at the end of this report.

References

List of Contributors

Andrade, Manuel Correia (Universidad Federal de Pernambuco, Recife). “The Cabanos Revolts of Pernambuco.”Google Scholar
Bastide, Roger (Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Sorbonne, Paris). “A Comparative Overview of Brazil and Portuguese Africa.”Google Scholar
Birmingham, David (School of Oriental and African Studies, London). “The African Response to Early Portuguese Activities in Angola.”Google Scholar
Soromenho, Castro (University of Sao Paulo). “Resistance in the Lunda Kingdom.”Google Scholar
Chilcote, Ronald (University of California, Riverside). “Crisis, Protest, and Change in Brazil.” “Indigenous Movements and Resistance in Portuguese Africa.” “A Typology of Nationalism, Developmental Tendencies, and an Analytical Framework.”Google Scholar
Childs, Gladwyn (Lisbon). “Conflicting Religious Tendencies among the Ovimbundu.”Google Scholar
Della Cava, Ralph (Queen's College, New York). “Padre Cicero and Partisan Politics.”Google Scholar
Forman, Shepard (Indiana University, Bloomington). “Disunity and Content: Peasant Movements in Brazil.”Google Scholar
Harris, Marvin (Columbia University, New York). “Portugal's Contribution to the Underdeveloped System.”Google Scholar
Jaguaribe, Helio (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, visiting). “The Brazilian Structural Crisis.”Google Scholar
Levine, Robert (New York State University, Stony Brook). “The Brazilian Revolts of 1935.”Google Scholar
Marcum, John (Lincoln University, Pennsylvania). “Tripolarity in Angolan Nationalism.”Google Scholar
Margarido, Alfredo (Ecole Patrique des Hautes Etudes, Sorbonne, Paris). “The Tokoist Church and its Influence on the Portuguese Colonization of Angola.”Google Scholar
Mendes de Almeida, Cândido (Faculdade do Direito Cândido Mendes, Rio de Janeiro). “Nationalism and the ISEB Experiment: The Emergence of the Brazilian Intelligentsia and its Responsibilities toward Portuguese Africa.”Google Scholar
Mondlane, Eduardo (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania). “The Failure of Portuguese Colonization in Mozambique.”Google Scholar
Moreiira, Adriano (Technical University of Lisbon, Lisbon). “Negative Aspects of the Reciprocal National Images of Portugal and Brazil.”Google Scholar
Ramos, Alberto Guerreiro (University of Southern California, Los Angeles). “A Typology of Nationalism in Brazil: A Case of Political Breakdown.”Google Scholar
Ribeiro, René (Universidad Federal de Pernambuco, Recife). “A Frustrated Contemporary Messianic Movement.”Google Scholar
Samuels, Michael A. (Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.). “A Failure of Hope: Education and Changing Opportunities in Angola under the Portuguese Republic.”Google Scholar
Silva Rêgo, A. da (University of Lisbon, Lisbon). “Conflicting Religious Orientations and Messianic Movements in the Portuguese Congo.”Google Scholar
Sodré, Nelson Werneck de (Rio de Janeiro). “Theoretical and Practical Aspects of Development in Brazil.”Google Scholar
Souza, Amaury de (Universidad de Rio de Janeiro and Massachusetts Institute of Technology). “The Cangaço and the Politics of Violence in Northeast Brazil.”Google Scholar
Wheeler, Douglas L. (University of New Hampshire, Durham). “Origins of African Nationalism in Angola: Assimilado Protest Writings, 1859-1929.”Google Scholar
Zartman, William (New York University, New York). “The Content of Nationalism in Guiné-Bissau.”Google Scholar