Liberalismo e sedição no Brasil meridional: da Revolução Farroupilha à Aliança Libertadora
Ivan Colangelo Salomao () and
Victor Cruz-e-Silva
No 2024_30, Working Papers, Department of Economics from University of São Paulo (FEA-USP)
Abstract:
The pathway covered by liberalism in Brazil is winding. As an ideology imported from the European bourgeoisie, it found in a colonized country the appropriate environment for its advancement, even if contiguous to its antinomy, that is, nationalism. Particularly, within the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, liberalism, obliquely absorbed by the Brazilian elite, oligarchies employed liberalism in an even more instrumental, and rather contradictory, way, if compared with the rest of the country. Liberalism, therefore, experienced a particular history within Rio Grande do Sul, where several conflicts were waged on its behalf. Accordingly, this paper aims at rescuing the history of liberalism in southern Brazil by reconstructing such conflicts—and the liberal element at its bottom: the Farroupilha Revolution (1835-1845), the Federalist Revolution (1893-1895), and the 1923 War.
Keywords: Liberalism; Rio Grande do Sul; Farroupilha Revolution; Federalist Revolution; Liberal Alliance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: B19 N46 N96 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024-12-10
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his and nep-hpe
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