Católico, protestante, cidadaõ: uma comparação entre Brasil e Estado Unidos
In: Coleção Origem
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In: Coleção Origem
In: Fronteira: Revista de Iniciacao Cientifica em Relacoes Internacionais, Band 5, Heft 10, S. 77-97
In: Igreja e Apostolado Pozitivista do Brazil n. 353
World Affairs Online
In: Novos Estudos CEBRAP, Heft 45, S. 65-77
In: Politica & sociedade: revista de sociologia politica, Band 13, Heft 28, S. 333-348
ISSN: 1677-4140, 2175-7984
[PT] O retorno da maioria dos países latino-americanos numa ordem constitucional após o esgotamento dos regimes ditatoriais no início dos anos 1980 – a chamada terceira onda de redemocratização descrita por Samuel Huntington - favoreceu a emergência de um novo ator coletivo na cena político-partidária da América Latina. A partir da pluralização do campo religioso latino-americano e tendo como marca distintiva a confessionalidade, o político evangélico conseguiu transpor o conflito cultural entre uma identidade construída em ruptura com o catolicismo romano da esfera privada – à esfera pública. A participação recorrente e duradoura dos protestantismos populares na política partidária, inclusive com representação nos Parlamentos latino-americanos, possibilitou a constituição de uma nova elite política evangélica existindo ao lado da velha oligarquia latifundiária ou do mais moderno segmento patronal. Neste ano de 2017 em que se comemora os 500 anos do movimento da Reforma Protestante do século XVI, o presente estudo investiga se o protestantismo latino-americano tem conseguido transformar as relações de poder entre Igreja e Estado e particularmente a cultura política patrimonialista baseada em relações de dominação pessoal – apadrinhamento, conchavo, nepotismo, clientelismo, populismos, etc, ou, ao contrário, destituído de um ethos cultural enraizado no liberalismo político tem procurado doutrinar a função pública impondo ao conjunto da população sua moral religiosa privada de maneira a constituir um Estado multiconfessional procurando obter as mesmas vantagens outorgadas pelo Estado à Igreja. ; [EN] The return of most Latin American countries to a constitutional order after the exhaustion of dictatorial regimes in the early 1980s - the so-called third wave of redemocratization described by Samuel Huntington - favored the emergence of a new collective actor in the Latin America's political-party scene. From the pluralization of the Latin American religious field and having as its distinguish mark the confessionality, the evangelicals politicians was able to transpose the cultural conflict between an identity built in rupture with Roman Catholicism from the private to the public sphere. The recurrent and enduring participation of Popular Protestantism in partisan politics, including representation in Latin American parliaments, has made possible the emergency of a new evangelical political elite existing alongside the old rural oligarchy or the most modern entrepreneurial segment. In this year of 2017, in which the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation movement of the sixteenth century is celebrated, the present study investigates whether Latin American Protestantism has succeeded in transforming power relations between Church and State in the Continent - particularly the patrimonialist political culture based on relationships of personal domination – patronage, collusion, nepotism, clientelism, populism, etc., or, on the contrary, devoid of a cultural ethos rooted in political liberalism has sought to indoctrinate the public function by imposing on the whole of the Latin American population its private religious morality in order to constitute a multiconfessional State seeking the same advantages granted by the State to the Church.
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In: Griot: Revista de Filosofia, Band 22, Heft 3, S. 149-161
We will use the Fanon's concept of society without mediations, based on structural racism, to explain the regressive tendency proper to societies of peripheric modernization, especially Brazil. From a criticism to Gilberto Freyre and Florestan Fernandes, who both assume a notion of ne-cessitarian sociological objectivism with an apolitical-depoliticized character in order to under-stand the development and the contradictions of current Brazilian society (Freyre's sadism-masochism; Fernandes' idea of Black incapability to protestant ethics due to slavery), both re-fusing structural racism and racial whitening, we will point exactly to (a) the systemic evolution as a White's or colonizer's intentioned and planified political project over the Black/colonized, which is, according us, the effective practical core and role of the formation and development of the colonial society; (b) the inexistence or the fragility of juridical, institutional and normative mediations between these divided and ossified realities of race (Whites over/against Blacks); (c) the direct violence and the permanent regression as the structural tendencies of the constitution and development of a society of peripheric and racialized modernization, including here the eras-ing and falsification of colonial history; and, finally, (d) the intrinsic correlation, once denied by Freyre and Fernandes, and on the contrary affirmed by Fanon, of race and class, race as class, class as race.