Title: Brazil’s Crisis Of Memory: Embracing Myths And Forgetting History
Issue #: 227  | Volume #: 46 | Number #: 4
Date: July 2019
Interviewer: Alexander Scott
Interviewees: Paulo Simões

Short Description: This issue is devoted to Brazil and examines how the last few years have brought significant transformations to the government and society, which defy earlier expectations, both positive and negative. Articles focus on political and economic subjects ranging from public demonstrations and labor unionization, the results of the PT administrations’ policies of land reform and healthcare management, to the difficulties brought on by the international recession, as well as questions of historical formation, cultural construction, self-identity, self-definition and criticism, and the conservative backlashes which have led to the rise of the rightist regime now in power.


LATIN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES
is a theoretical and scholarly journal for discussion and debate on the political economy of capitalism, imperialism, and socialism in the Americas. For more than forty years, it has published timely, progressive analyses of the social forces shaping contemporary Latin America.
http://latinamericanperspectives.com