Gilberto Freyre Learned in the US How to Craft a New Brazilian Self-image

Gilberto FreyreBrazil, the perennial country of the future, has finally taken its place on the world stage. Yet, as the United States learned after the Second World War, Brazil now realizes that with economic prosperity comes responsibility.

The American government had to eradicate racial segregation to avoid recriminations from the Russians during the Cold War. Similarly, Brazil has witnessed a marked increase in demands from within and abroad for greater inclusion of Blacks in mainstream institutions.

Some, such as Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., head of the Harvard Afro-American Studies Department, contend that affirmative action is the solution. These American-style approaches to racial diversity cause consternation in Brazil. Many call for a Brazilian answer to Brazilian problems.

The best approach just might be for Brazilians to take a cue from their intellectual heavyweight Gilberto Freyre. The doctor was a Brazilian who became the consummate Americano.

Freyre received his education in racial theory in the United States and then tailored that knowledge to the Brazilian context. In this respect, Freyre used a synthesis of new world thinking to help enlighten him about the situation at home. Likewise, rather than dismissing American public policies, Brazilians might do well by embracing these initiatives, to a degree.

Born in the Northeast state of Pernambuco, the professor attended college at Baylor University in Texas and Columbia University in New York City. His scholarship employed the race theories of Franz Boas, the father of American cultural sociology.

Freyre used this knowledge gained in the United States to craft a new Brazilian self-image. He helped create a society that did not ignore, at least publicly, its history of race mixing. In fact, Brazilians began to celebrate their multi-racial heritage.

In his magisterial work The Masters and the Slaves (1933), Freyre advanced the idea that Brazilian society was essentially a racially mixed one. Over the centuries, Africans, Portuguese and Indians had intertwined culturally and sexually to create a new people, the book explained. The multifarious colors visible on any street were evidence of this miscegenation.

The Portuguese comprised the master class, yet to Freyre, they remained open to the contributions of the others to society. Part of the explanation for this liberality was that Portugal had itself endured centuries of domination by the darker-complexioned Moors.

Hence, Brazilian society supposedly never dehumanized its oppressed classes, even during slavery. The nation was an example of a veritable racial democracy. All groups possessed a spot in the national self-image. In fact, this racial mixture was a thing to celebrate, rather than deny, as was common throughout Latin America.

Despite its critics, Freyre’s work still stands unchallenged as literature that integrates Blacks and Indians into the national myth. Though some find Freyre delusional about the state of race relations, no one can deny inclusion is a positive aim.

That there is racial inequality in Brazil is a fact Freyre did not attempt to challenge. His goal was to figure out just where the nation should proceed, starting from its current situation. Freyre used the past to imagine a unique Brazilian solution to the future.

Brazilians today should consider embracing American ideas and theories about race. Freyre demonstrated that viewing the nation through the lens of an outsider could help increase perception of the meaning of being Brazilian.

The United States has much to learn from Brazil too. Americans waited until the late-1980s, over fifty years after The Masters and the Slaves, to embrace multiculturalism and diversity.

Americans have eradicated racial segregation and taken overt action to increase minority presence in society. Nevertheless, while acknowledging the need for diversity programs, the United States implicitly conceived of these groups as perpetual outsiders.

Brazilians have experienced less of a problem accepting multiculturalism. Freyre taught Brazilians to accept diversity as the point of origin rather than a destination. The question is how the Luso Tropical nation can better integrate its national institutions. In sum, both countries need intellectuals, artists and activists willing to learn from the other side.

Dr. David Kenneth P. is a professor of History and English language instruction.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil: Just a Typical Paulista Week. I Got Robbed Yesterday

March 4th, 2010, 9:55 a.m. in the bedroom of my Brooklin apartment. I pace ...

Brazilian president Lula meets his Ecuadorian counterpart Rafael Correa

Brazil and Ecuador Want to Do Without IMF and World Bank

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his counterpart Rafael Correa from Ecuador ...

Brazil Wants Debt Relief from World for Investing in Education

Immediately after the announcement of the UNESCO Index of Educational Development, ranking Brazil 72nd ...

Brazil: Dirty Bomb Explodes in Workers Party’s Hands

With less than two weeks for the presidential election Brazil was again rocked by ...

Brazilian movie Money on the $ide

Miami Festival of Brazilian Movies to Show 15 Feature and 10 Short Films

After a successful 10th anniversary, the Brazilian Film Festival of Miami is back for ...

Brazil Blames Cheap US Dollar and Not China for Global Trade Tension

Brazil is thinking about taking additional steps to limit gains in the local currency, ...

Milplast, in São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil

Brazil Gets 24% More on Its Share of Foreign Direct Investment

The volume of private funds destined to developing countries in the form of direct ...

Brazilian Petrobras's oil platform

Brazil’s President Uses Petrobras Platform for Own Reelection

Brazilian giant Petrobras announces for the first time in its history a surplus for ...

Massive Blackout Hits Brazil. Sí£o Paulo, Rio, 5 Other States in the Dark

 A massive blackout has hit Brazil this Tuesday night, November 10, around 10:15 pm, after hydroelectric ...

4.7% of All Brazil Exports Go to Arabs, a 35% Jump

Brazilian exports to the Arab countries generated US$ 7.07 billion from January to September, ...