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Afro-Brazilian: critical perspectives on knowledge and development

Alexandre Emboaba Da Costa

Third World Quarterly, 2010, vol. 31, issue 4, 655-674

Abstract: This article ‘thinks with’ an Afro-Brazilian mobilisation of ancestralidade (ancestrality) as a means to explore, unmask and mark the centrality of ‘race’ in development. In contrast to thinking about race as cultural difference necessitating inclusion in development, thinking with Afro-Brazilian knowledge aims to rework the very category of development. ‘Thinking with’ engages critical knowledge emerging out of Afro-Brazilian struggles to forward a theory and practice of substantive political, institutional and social transformation. The article juxtaposes the culturalisms of national ideology and multicultural development policies with ancestralidade as a dynamic political practice that contests capitalism's racialised hierarchies while embodying another sociality of development. An analysis of one cultural centre's efforts to restructure the school curriculum demonstrates that the ‘past’ of racialised capitalism and ancestral memory are each contemporary projects which evince the relational formation and contested meaning of ‘race’ in development.

Date: 2010
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DOI: 10.1080/01436591003701166

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