4.3 Article

Stereotypes and national identity: Experiencing the Emotional Brazilian

Journal

IDENTITIES-GLOBAL STUDIES IN CULTURE AND POWER
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 103-122

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10702890701801866

Keywords

national identity; stereotypes; Brazil; friendship; emotionality

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In this article, I examine how stereotypes are deployed in the process of experiencing national identities. Specifically, I analyse how a group of Brazilian academics who have studied in Europe and the United States have dealt with stereotypical notions of Brazilians as warm people who establish friendship easily. Ideas about a greater emotionality, which were often seen as negative from a European colonial perspective, are embraced and re-signified by them as a positive feature of Brazilian national identity, particularly when compared to the supposed closed nature of some Europeans. I argue therefore that the presence of such stereotypes contributes to reinforce a subjective sense of Brazilianess and also reveals the negotiations of power relations in the process of elaborating Brazilian national identity.

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