Non­fic­tion

Brazil­ian Belong­ing: Jew­ish Pol­i­tics in Cold War Latin America

  • From the Publisher
December 18, 2024

Brazil­ian Belong­ing exam­ines a cen­tu­ry of Brazil­ian Jew­ish polit­i­cal activism, from the onset of Jew­ish mass migra­tion to Brazil in the ear­ly 1920s to the present. The home of the largest Jew­ish com­mu­ni­ty liv­ing in a non­white-major­i­ty coun­try in the world, and a coun­try that has wit­nessed extend­ed peri­ods of demo­c­ra­t­ic and dic­ta­to­r­i­al rule, Brazil offers an impor­tant win­dow for rethink­ing Jew­ish ideas about race and nation, democ­ra­cy and dic­ta­tor­ship, and local and glob­al forms of state violence.

In this book, Michael Rom high­lights the impor­tant roles Brazil­ian Jews played in promi­nent social move­ments – move­ments that con­test­ed the mean­ing of the dis­course of racial democ­ra­cy, fought against the mil­i­tary dic­ta­tor­ship, and sought out new polit­i­cal pos­si­bil­i­ties fol­low­ing the return of demo­c­ra­t­ic rule. He draws on exten­sive research – includ­ing pre­vi­ous­ly unex­am­ined secret police and intel­li­gence records, the Brazil­ian Yid­dish press, and oral his­to­ry inter­views – to illu­mi­nate decades of Brazil­ian Jew­ish activism under both demo­c­ra­t­ic and dic­ta­to­r­i­al regimes. Offer­ing the first study of mod­ern Jew­ish pol­i­tics and Latin Amer­i­can eth­nic belong­ing through­out the Cold War, this book sit­u­ates Brazil­ian Jew­ish activism with­in the transna­tion­al con­texts of the imme­di­ate after­math of the Holo­caust, Cold War super­pow­er rival­ries, Latin Amer­i­can rev­o­lu­tion­ary insur­gen­cies, and the Israeli-Pales­tin­ian conflict.

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