“<i>I’ll Samba Someplace Else</i> is an outstanding book that offers a fresh perspective on the ways in which race and ethnicity have been inscribed into the urban geography, shaping vast inequalities in São Paulo over the past century.”—Bryan McCann, author of, <i>Hard Times in the Marvelous City</i>
In I’ll Samba Someplace Else, Andrew G. Britt maps the interwoven histories of three of the city of São Paulo’s most iconic ethnoracialized neighborhoods, popularly known as “African” Brasilãndia, “Japanese” Liberdade, and “Italian” Bexiga. Following these spaces over the mid-twentieth century through inventive methods of spatial history, archival research, and sustained engagement with African-descendent cultural organizations, Britt shows that these ethnoracialized neighborhoods did not accrue naturally over time. Instead, they were planned, produced, and contested by an array of individuals, from powerful urbanist-politicians and neighborhood businessowners to celebrated samba composers and historic preservationists. The ethnoracialization of these neighborhoods, Britt argues, served paradoxical ends: it reproduced consequential racialized inequities while, simultaneously, bolstering discourses of multicultural harmony. By untangling the paradoxes of ethnoracial space in Brazil’s most populous, diverse, and unequal city, I’ll Samba Someplace Else elucidates how popular ideologies of multiculturalism endure despite persistently high levels of racialized inequity and anti-Black violence in both Brazil and beyond.
Les mer
Mapping the interwoven histories of three of São Paulo’s most prominent ethnoracialized neighborhoods, I’ll Samba Someplace Else shows how popular ideologies of multiculturalism endure despite enduringly high levels of racialized inequity and anti-Black violence in Brazil and beyond.
Les mer
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. The Paradoxes of Ethnoracial Space 1
1. Avenues and the Afterlives of Slavery 34
2. Spatial Projects of Forgetting 81
3. Neighborhoods of Mixture and Massacre 148
4. Belonging-as-Being: BrasilÂndia as “Little Africa” 199
5. Producing Ethnoracial Infrastructures: Making “Japanese” Liberdade and “Italian” Bexiga 241
Epilogue. Early 1970s: “Asphalt Has Today Covered Our Ground” 288
Notes 299
Bibliography 349
Index 377
Introduction. The Paradoxes of Ethnoracial Space 1
1. Avenues and the Afterlives of Slavery 34
2. Spatial Projects of Forgetting 81
3. Neighborhoods of Mixture and Massacre 148
4. Belonging-as-Being: BrasilÂndia as “Little Africa” 199
5. Producing Ethnoracial Infrastructures: Making “Japanese” Liberdade and “Italian” Bexiga 241
Epilogue. Early 1970s: “Asphalt Has Today Covered Our Ground” 288
Notes 299
Bibliography 349
Index 377
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781478029373
Publisert
2026-04-07
Utgiver
Duke University Press
Vekt
572 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Spansk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
406
Forfatter