The Influence of the Memory of the 1964-1985 Dictatorship on Brazilian Democratic Politics

Authors

  • Clorrie Violet Yeomans

Keywords:

Memory, Brazilian military dictatorship, Democracy

Abstract

This paper discusses how the memory of the Brazilian dictatorship exerts both positive and negative influences on the democratic quality of post-transitional politics. Conservative politicians, such as Jair Bolsonaro, and their civilian supporters appropriate the military regime’s binary political rhetoric that demonised progressive, leftist forces and glorified authoritarian, right-wing forces in order to censor political participation and to strengthen the ongoing impunity of the Brazilian Armed Forces and the Military Police. However, these barriers to combatting impunity via the state have also inspired the innovation of grassroots social movements which offer an alternative view of the past, denouncing the dictatorship's authoritarian reality and instilling a culture of human and civil rights among Brazilians today. The case study of Brazil demonstrates how the memory of authoritarianism in South America can be a double-edged sword for post-transition democracy and human rights.

Author Biography

Clorrie Violet Yeomans

Clorrie Yeomans holds an MPhil in Latin American Studies from St Antony’s College, University of Oxford and a BA in Modern Languages and Cultures from Durham University in the United Kingdom. This paper is based on an assessment written for the “Politics of Brazil” module of her MPhil. clorrie.v.yeomans@gmail.com; https://orcid.org/0009-0001-9451-3151; https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Clorrie_Yeomans3.

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Published

2023-12-05 — Updated on 2023-12-07

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