EBOOK

The Revolt of the Whip

Joseph Love
(0)
Pages
176
Year
2012
Language
English

About

This short book brings to life a unique and spectacular set of events in Latin American history. In November 1910, shortly after the inauguration of Brazilian President Hermes da Fonseca, ordinary sailors killed several officers and seized control of major new combat vessels, including two of the most powerful battleships ever produced, and commenced bombing Rio de Janeiro. The mutineers, led by an Afro-Brazilian and mostly black themselves, demanded greater rights-above all the abolition of flogging in the Brazilian navy, the last Western navy to tolerate it. This form of torture was closely associated in the sailors' minds with slavery, which had only been prohibited in Brazil in 1888. These events and the scandals that followed initiated a sustained debate about the role of race and class in Brazilian society and the extent to which Brazil could claim to be a modern nation. The commemoration of the centenary of the mutiny in 2010 saw the country still divided about the meaning of the Revolt of the Whip.

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Reviews

"Historical research and writing on the revolt was stimulated by its centenary in 2010. Most of the resulting publications were written in Portuguese, so Joseph Love's book is valuable in providing the option of an English-language study . . . Love's short study is commendable in using a historical event to highlight the controversial issue of race relations in modern Brazil."
Journal of Latin American Studies
"In this compact book, there is both a big and insightful argument about the stakes in Brazilian politics across the twentieth century and an important and original contribution to understanding the transition in Brazilian politics during the Old Republic."
University of Chicago
"Love offers more than a dramatic blow-by-blow narrative of [Brazil's 1910 Navy Revolt]; he deftly supplies a broader context that renders it newly intelligible."
Journal of Interdisciplinary History

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