Books

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo

Racism in a Racial Democracy: The Maintenance of White Supremacy in Brazil by France Winddance Twine, Rutgers University Press, 1998, 192 pp., $19 paperback. Racial Revolutions: Antiracism and...

...This discourse of silencing race is upheld by people from all segments of the political spectrum in Latin America...
...For example, Warren's concern with the "racial huckster thesis," although pertinent to Brazil, is fundamentally based on the situation of Indians in this country...
...Furthermore, Warren takes actors' racial subjectivities quite seriously...
...The Brazilian blindness to race is recreated by ideologies, such as the idea that inequality in Brazil is class-based, that all Brazilians are racially mixed or that AfroBrazilians are culturally inferior...
...Despite these limitations, these books should be widely read because they offer new avenues for research, as well as useful information for activists and policymakers wanting to address Latin America's racial inequities...
...Also, practices such as embranquecimento (whitening)-the erasing of blackness and the inflation of whiteness at the family level-remove race as a relevant factor in Brazil...
...he shortcomings of these studies are typical of the literature on race in Latin America...
...He labels the four Indian communities he studies as "post-traditional" because they are comprised of racially mixed people who have lost most of their indigenous language and some of their traditions yet "regard these fragments and shadows of tradition as relevant or important" and "embrace, privilege, and value them...
...Furthermore, on occasion both advance positions that seem mostly based on racial reality in the United States...
...Why are you importing a U.S...
...Warren thus shows that posttraditional Indians receive more disincentives from the state and the masses alike (violence, ostracism, ridicule, economic misery, etc...
...We are not black, or white, or Indian...
...More specifically, Warren analyzes the political resurgence among Indians in eastern Brazil...
...racial classifications, leading her to regard pardos as blacks rather than as an independent racial category...
...Together they account for Afro-Brazilians' limited strategies to deal with racial discrimination...
...Relying on 53 interviews and her ethnographic observations in "Vasalia," a small coffee-growing village in southeastern Brazil, Twine concludes that although race shapes the life chances of all Brazilians, they do not see race and racism as salient Eduardo Bonilla-Silva is associate profes- sor of sociology at Texas A&M Universiy...
...Here I review books on racism in Brazil that exemplify the current wave of racial studies in Latin America...
...These books embody some of the advances on the literature on race in Latin America...
...For her part, Twine encourages analysts to conduct more nuanced, in-depth examinations of how race matters in the daily lives of Brazilians by providing a rich example of how Brazilians talk and think about race...
...features of social life...
...He therefore attributes Indian resurgence to the organizational activities of the National Foundation for the Indian and the Catholic-sponsored Indigenous Missionary Council, mid 1980s democratization, and the development and circulation of alternative definitions of Indianness...
...Nonetheless, a scholarship highlighting the significance of racial stratification in the region has been in place for 40 years...
...France Winddance Twine's concern is explaining Brazil's "paradox of pervasive racial inequality and the continued failure of antiracist organizations and anti-racist policies to generate grassroots support among non-elites for antiracist programs...
...In Racial Revolutions, Jonathan Warren addresses a much-forgotten element in Latin American racial studies: the fate and status of Indians...
...Twine filters the racial subjectivities of "blacks," "pardos" (individuals of mixed African, European and indigenous descent) and "whites" through U.S...
...Central to Warren's effort is the challenging of the "racial huckster thesis," the idea that these Indians are just "Indian" to get benefits from the state...
...We are all Latin Americans...
...Both authors lack a theory on racial stratification in Brazil-or Latin America-to guide their observations and inform their analyses...
...than incentives (usually land after protracted struggles...
...For instance, Warren's forceful advocacy for the need to go beyond the black-white dichotomy is a welcomed development...
...Furthermore, because Twine fails to accept individual racial mobility through whitening as real (albeit limited), she ends up classifying the actions and beliefs of dark Brazilians as the product of "false consciousness...
...Hence, he has opened a new field of research by problematizing who is, or can be, an "Indian...
...His most recent books are White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2001) and Color Blind Racism or How Whites Justify Contemporary Racial Inequality (Rowman and Littlefield, forthcoming 2002...
...Racial Revolutions: Antiracism and Indian Resurgence in Brazil by Jonathan W. Warren, Duke University Press, 2001, 392 pp., $64.95 cloth, $21.95 paperback...
...problem into our society...

Vol. 35 • May 2002 • No. 6


 
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