Week 18: The Transition to Democracy; Neoliberalism; New Social Movements (1): Liberation Theology
Lecture powerpoint [full lecture on transition]
Lecture powerpoint [2018 revised lecture, merging content of week 7 and week 8 lectures]
Seminar Questions
- Why did Brazil move back to democracy by 1985?
- Who drove the process of “opening” (abertura)?
- What was the role of the Church and Liberation Theology?
- What were the goals of Liberation Theology and how successfully were they implemented in Brazil in the 1970s and 1980s?
- Did the transition to democracy bring new methods of grassroots political organising, or simply re-package older ones?
Seminar Readings
•Skidmore Chapter 8, “Redemocratization: Old Hope, New Problems”;
•Rebecca Abers, Inventing local democracy: grassroots politics in Brazil (2000), Chapter 2, “Urban Politics and Neighbourhood Organizing in Brazil,” pp 26-47 [on library scans page]
•Robin Nagle and Jill Nagle, Claiming the Virgin: The Broken Promise of Liberation Theology in Brazil (1997), Ch 1, “Consecrated Politics and Active Religion,” pp 1-24 [on library scans page]
•“Dom Helder Câmara: The Father of the Church of the Poor,” in Beattie, ed, The Human Tradition, 249-67