Tag: artebrasileiros-66
Why the war?
In 1932, an exchange of letters between the father of physics, Albert Einstein, and the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, translated the concerns of the two humanist intellectuals in that first third of the 20th century. In the letters, both questioned each other, from perspectives completely different, the reason for the armed conflicts, shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War.
Culture Wars grow on social media
Why attacks on cultural institutions and works of art are used as instruments of the right, based on algorithms that value hate speech
What can a work of culture, art or criticism do?
A question for Tales Ab'Sáber* João Cezar de Castro Rocha – In his documentary Intervention, Love doesn't mean much, he anticipated many of the horrors that today want to dominate the Brazilian scene. How to understand that...
Film addresses the madness of the evangelization of indigenous people in Javari
Avesso do Céu, by the duo Dias & Riedweg, was filmed in the Javari Reserve, in the far west of the Amazon, and has as its theme the conversion practiced by dozens of neo-Pentecostal churches, even with newly contacted indigenous people
The recreation of a cosmogony
Thiago Martins de Melo develops political work in which he tirelessly denounces necropolitics and the erasure of the history of images by colonization
War, cultural war, art
Read the editorial of issue #66 of arte!brasileiros, by Patricia Rousseaux
Against fundamentalist erasure, the strength of shamans
By Luiz Bolognesi Evangelical, Jesuit, Capuchin and now neo-Pentecostal Protestant violence, which is based on this evangelical Protestant church that comes from the United States and has invaded Latin America since the...
Repeat. It's good to remember
A series of exhibitions and events recalls 60 years of the military dictatorship, revisiting traumas and legacies and connecting the past to recent threats to democracy
Issue #66 contributors
See who are some of the contributors to issue #66 of arte!brasileiros
An oasis in the semiarid northeast
In Cariri, a cultural center built on the ruins of a seminary and a hospital shows that will, respect and political intelligence can create a lung of art and environmental preservation