Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Mazzini and Brazil*

View through CrossRef
This chapter concentrates on the ‘Mazzinian moment’ in Brazil, the six years from 1835 to 1840 in which a small group of Italian admirers of Mazzini – notably Garibaldi – was active both in Rio de Janeiro and Rio Grande do Sul. The later influence of Mazzini in Brazil, especially on the great wave of Italian immigrants who arrived in the country between 1870 and 1914, was less direct, mixed with ideas from other sources such as the anarchism of Bakunin. It is Garibaldi rather than Mazzini who remains a hero in Brazil.
Title: Mazzini and Brazil*
Description:
This chapter concentrates on the ‘Mazzinian moment’ in Brazil, the six years from 1835 to 1840 in which a small group of Italian admirers of Mazzini – notably Garibaldi – was active both in Rio de Janeiro and Rio Grande do Sul.
The later influence of Mazzini in Brazil, especially on the great wave of Italian immigrants who arrived in the country between 1870 and 1914, was less direct, mixed with ideas from other sources such as the anarchism of Bakunin.
It is Garibaldi rather than Mazzini who remains a hero in Brazil.

Related Results

Giuseppe Mazzini and Irish Nationalism, 1845–70
Giuseppe Mazzini and Irish Nationalism, 1845–70
This chapter focuses on Mazzini's profound effect on Irish political life. As elsewhere in Europe, Mazzini, with his vision of Italian nationalism, was influential in Ireland, desp...
Mazzini and Spain, 1820–72
Mazzini and Spain, 1820–72
This chapter examines the Italian factor in Spanish politics between the ‘liberal triennium’ (1820–3), when Mazzini first showed an interest in Spain, and his death in 1872. The fi...
Giuseppe Mazzini in Britain and Italy: Divergent Legacies, 1837–1915
Giuseppe Mazzini in Britain and Italy: Divergent Legacies, 1837–1915
This chapter examines how Mazzini's exile in England, and his adoption by sections of the British radical movement, led to the more illiberal aspects of his thought, especially in ...
Tra Italia e Spagna: Mazzini, Garrido, Díaz y Pérez
Tra Italia e Spagna: Mazzini, Garrido, Díaz y Pérez
Mazzini, Garrido, Pi y Margall, Díaz y Pérez sono gli autori che vengono presi in esame sulla base dei confronti, spesso diretti, che emergono dai loro scritti e dal loro agire. Se...
Carlo Cattaneo and the Swiss Idea of Liberty
Carlo Cattaneo and the Swiss Idea of Liberty
Carlo Cattaneo (1801–69), who belonged to Mazzini's generation, took an active part in the Risorgimento, wrote important works in many fields, and became a leader of the national r...
Liberalism at Large: Mazzini and Nineteenth-century Indian Thought
Liberalism at Large: Mazzini and Nineteenth-century Indian Thought
This chapter considers the appropriation and deployment of the writings and image of Giuseppe Mazzini by the first generation of Indian liberal nationalists, notably the Bengali po...
The Gandhian Mazzini: Democratic Nationalism, Self-rule, and Non-violence
The Gandhian Mazzini: Democratic Nationalism, Self-rule, and Non-violence
This chapter explores Mahatma Gandhi's engagement with Mazzinian ideas. It seeks to address the ways in which Giuseppe Mazzini and his doctrine became ‘Gandhian’; that is, how they...
The Legacy of Kant: Giuseppe Mazzini’s Cosmopolitanism of Nations
The Legacy of Kant: Giuseppe Mazzini’s Cosmopolitanism of Nations
This chapter argues that Giuseppe Mazzini's thought belongs to the tradition of cosmopolitanism insofar as he deems the self-determination of autonomous and democratic nations the ...

Back to Top