Where Does Brazil Go Now? | Socialist Night School
Start: 2022-11-07 18:00:00 UTC Eastern Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-04:00)
End: 2022-11-07 20:00:00 UTC Eastern Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-04:00)
This is a virtual event
On October 30, Brazilians reelected Former President Luiz Inácio Lula da
Silva to an unprecedented third term, defeating the far-right extremist
incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. Despite an entrenchment of deeply reactionary
forces in Brazil’s recent congressional and gubernatorial races, Lula
has mounted an epic political comeback, confronting a right-wing
onslaught in the world’s fourth-largest democracy. The world looks much
different today than it did twenty years ago when Lula was first
elected. Brazil faces enormous challenges and opportunities—some old,
some new—in the years ahead. With global attention on Brazil as Lula
turns to the task of shaping his administration, it is not too soon to
ask how he will govern, or what the Brazilian left’s task is moving
forward. Join Sabrina Fernandes and Andre Pagliarini for a conversation
about the campaign and its implications, Brazilian history, the left,
and possible futures for Latin America’s largest nation.
Sabrina Fernandes is
a Brazilian ecosocialist organizer with a PhD in Sociology from
Carleton University, Canada. She is currently a guest researcher at the
Latin American Institute of Freie Universität Berlin, Full Collaborating
Researcher at the University of Brasília and a postdoctoral fellow with
the International Research Group on Authoritarianism and
Counter-Strategies of the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung. Sabrina is also a
contributing editor at Jacobin Magazine and producer of Tese Onze, a
socialist political education platform in Brazil.
Andre
Pagliarini is an assistant professor of history at Hampden-Sydney
College, Virginia, a fellow at the Washington Brazil Office, and a
columnist at The Brazilian Report. He has written widely on Brazilian
politics and history in Jacobin, The New Republic, The Guardian, among other
outlets. He is currently working on a book about the politics of nationalism in modern Brazil and another on mass politics across post-independence Latin America.
This event will be hybrid in-person and online. In addition to RSVPing, please fill out this form if you are interested in joining us in-person. Seating is limited. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfBm8g8CzJnc94wtsh3vb2wenPBHTbPTH1hNd1ITVYarE-y4g/viewform?usp=sf_link
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This event is open to both DSA Members and supporters.
Not a Member? Please consider becoming a Member. Fees are on a sliding scale according to what you feel you can afford: https://dsausa.org/join?source=Metro%20DC