"A useful work of an impressive standard." - "London Times Higher Education Supplement". "The essays are original, focused, wide-ranging, and well-documented." - "Choice". "Modern Brazil", a collection of original essays, views the largest country in South America through the multiple lenses of political science, economics, telecommunications, and religion. The editors, Michael L. Conniff and Frank D. McCann, have provided a frame for this analysis of a complex society by centering on the elites, those who run national affairs, and the masses, those poor and working-class people who have little direct influence on them. Discussing the political elites from regional, national, and military standpoints are, respectively, Joseph L. Love and Bert J. Barickman, Conniff, and McCann. The economic elites, notably businessmen and industrialists, are analyzed by Steven Topik and Eli Diniz. The masses are considered in chapters by Eul Soo Pang, Thomas Holloway, and Michael Hall and Marco Aurelio Garcia. Sam Adamo views the historical situation of blacks and mulattos in Brazil. In the final section, examining connections between the elites and masses, Robert M.
Levine writes about how the former perceive the povo, Joseph Straubhaas looks at the mass media; and Fred Gillette Strum ex-amines religion in Brazil. The editors have included a general introduction, an epilogue focusing on Brazil in the late 1980s, and a glossary. Michael L. Conniff, a professor of history at the University of New Mexico, is the author of "Urban Politics in Brazil: The Rise of Populism, l925-1945" (1981) and other books. Frank D. McCann is a professor of history at the University of New Hampshire whose books include "The Brazilian-American Alliance, 1937-1945" (1973).
- ISBN10 0803231318
- ISBN13 9780803231313
- Publish Date 1 July 1989
- Publish Status Out of Stock
- Publish Country US
- Imprint University of Nebraska Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 306
- Language English