2002
DOI: 10.1177/0094582x0202900104
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Historical Roots of the “Whitening” of Brazil

Abstract: Historical Roots of the "Whitening" of Brazil by Sales Augusto dos Santos Translated by Laurence HallewellIt has been estimated that, over a 300-year period from the second half of the sixteenth century until the first half of the nineteenth, some 3.5-3.6 million black slaves were brought to Brazil from Africa (Goulart, 1950: 272; Mattoso, 1981: 53). This enormous number of black Africans transformed the racial makeup of Brazil. We do not know exactly when it happened, but by the end of the eighteenth century… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…These were, in decreasing order, 34% Italians, 29% Portuguese, 14% Spanish, 5% Japanese, 4% Germans, 2% Lebanese and Syrians, and 12% others. This phenomenon, which has been denominated the "whitening of Brazil", had complex economic and sociological causes, was tinged with racist ideology, and has been well discussed in the literature (4,5).…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…These were, in decreasing order, 34% Italians, 29% Portuguese, 14% Spanish, 5% Japanese, 4% Germans, 2% Lebanese and Syrians, and 12% others. This phenomenon, which has been denominated the "whitening of Brazil", had complex economic and sociological causes, was tinged with racist ideology, and has been well discussed in the literature (4,5).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The subsequent decrease in the number of Amerindians by the combined effect of guns, germs and steel (8) and the large influx of Africans from the slave trade led to a second phase that lasted until 1850. The third period occurred after 1850 when African immigration stopped and the very prominent entry of Europeans occurred, leading to the "whitening" of Brazil (4,5).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Mulattos and some blacks from various classes had reached prominence during the Imperial period and dealt with the Eurocentric conception of Brazil very differently. However, most of the Brazilian elite harbored enormous anxiety and shame about Brazil's African heritage, and their solution was to whiten the country (Santos & Hallewell, ; Skidmore, , pp. 64–69).…”
Section: From Abolition To Gilberto Freyrementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The answer as to why this mattered to Nabuco is that he believed and acknowledged that Brazil was a multiracial society and that slavery was wrong, but he thought that race was a malleable concept and that, through proper education and training, people of non-European heritage could also be "civilized" and escape their black racial identity. Mulattos and some blacks from African heritage, and their solution was to whiten the country (Santos & Hallewell, 2002;Skidmore, 1993, pp. 64-69).…”
Section: From Abolition To Gilberto Freyrementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among them, one could name as the most important the fall of the Empire and proclamation of the Republic; the substitution of slave with paid labor (Silva, 2006); the consolidation of capitalism as well as the development of the secondary and tertiary sectors of the economy. Rio further underwent significant urbanization and demographic growth due to first international (Silva, 2006) but since the 1930s especially national immigration (Perlman, 1976), the former subsidized by the state in order to attract desirable, mostly European and white paid labor (Santos, 2002). With the installation of public services, such as of transport and sanitation, the resulting accelerated urbanization led to a housing crisis.…”
Section: Our Translation)mentioning
confidence: 99%