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Resumen

By voiding the previous social pact, including the predominant conception of racial integration, the Brazilian military regime (1964–1985) created the conditions for a radical understanding of Black difference, which found its leading motif in the memory of the Quilombo of Palmares, a historical community of rebel slaves. A new Black movement understood its cultural and historical experience as containing a utopian legacy, an alternative for a Brazil marked by racism and inequality. To overcome its problems of legitimation, the regime set into motion a process of gradual democratization. The need to symbolically and culturally accomplish this transition created an institutional breach for the memory politics of the Black movement. In this context, the inclusion of the Serra da Barriga, a site of the war against Palmares, into national cultural heritage became the testing grounds for novel politics of culture that changed both the understanding of Brazilian nationhood and Black difference, as represented in the memory of Palmares.

Año de publicación
2021
Revista académica
Memory Studies
Volumen
14
Número
6
Número de páginas
1362-1381
Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd
Fecha de publicación
dec
Idioma de edición
English
Numero ISSN
17506980 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85121047435&doi=10.1177%2f17506980211061456&partnerID=40&md5=3618aa4447e87451d64e1f072e68aa03
DOI
10.1177/17506980211061456
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