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  • Coming soon
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Expected online publication date:
April 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009025713

Book description

What do nineteenth-century fiction, early twentieth-century popular music, 1930s soccer, 1950s film comedy, 1960s experimental art and 1970s soap operas have in common with one another? Each reveal the deep patterns structuring social and cultural life in Rio de Janeiro. Bringing a fresh perspective to one of the most visited cities in South America, Bryan McCann explores each manifestation in turn, mining their depths and drawing connections between artistic movements and political and economic transitions. The book explores the centrality of slavery to every aspect of life in nineteenth century Rio and its long legacy through to the current day, illuminating both the city's grinding inequality and violence, as well as its triumphant cultural expressions. Rio de Janeiro is a unique and fascinating city, and through ten pivotal moments, McCann reveals its boundless creativity and contradictions, and shows how it has been continually remade by newcomers, strivers, and tricksters.

Reviews

‘A lucid tour de force, full of illuminating detours. This brilliant book captures the multi-faceted city for newcomers and invites seasoned experts to rediscover it.’

Bruno Carvalho - author of Porous City: A Cultural History of Rio de Janeiro

‘Lyrically written, creatively conceived, and bound to fascinate readers at every level of familiarity with Rio, the book draws together ten moments that range from the recent and well-known to less visible moments from the more distant past.’

Bejamin A. Cowan - author of Moral Majorities across the Americas: Brazil, the United States, and the Creation of the Religious Right

‘A Black city torn between formality and informality, Rio de Janeiro is a vivid portrait of its cultural history. Through McCann’s compelling book, one can understand why Rio has for centuries reinvented itself at every corner.’

Pedro Meira Monteiro - Arthur W. Marks ’19 Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University

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