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  2. Culture of Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Brazil

    In Brazilian culture, living in a community is vital due to the fact Brazilians are very involved with one another. "Brazilians organize their lives around and about others, maintain a high level of social involvement, and consider personal relations of primary importance in all human interactions.

  3. Brazilians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilians

    A Brazilian can also be a person born abroad to a Brazilian parent or legal guardian as well as a person who acquired Brazilian citizenship. Brazil is a multiethnic society, which means that it is home to people of many ethnic origins, and there is no correlation between one's stock and their Brazilian identity.

  4. Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil

    The word Brazil probably comes from the Portuguese word for brazilwood, a tree that once grew plentifully along the Brazilian coast. [31] In Portuguese, brazilwood is called pau-brasil, with the word brasil commonly given the etymology "red like an ember", formed from brasa ('ember') and the suffix -il (from -iculum or -ilium). [32]

  5. São Paulo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/São_Paulo

    In 1922, the Brazilian Modernist Movement, launched in São Paulo, began to achieve cultural independence. Brazil had gone through the same stages of development as the rest of Latin America, but its political and cultural independence came more gradually. [238] Brazilian elite culture was originally strongly tied to Portugal. Gradually writers ...

  6. Portal:Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Brazil

    Brazil became a presidential republic following a military coup d'état in 1889. An authoritarian military dictatorship emerged in 1964 and ruled until 1985, after which civilian governance resumed. Brazil's current constitution, enacted in 1988, defines it as a democratic federal republic. Brazil is a regional and middle power and rising ...

  7. Cultural globalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_globalization

    [15] [16] This process, understood as cultural imperialism, [17] [page needed] is associated with the destruction of cultural identities, dominated by a homogenized and westernized, consumer culture. The global influence of American products, businesses and culture in other countries around the world has been referred to as Americanization ...

  8. Tupi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupi_people

    The Tupi people, a subdivision of the Tupi-Guarani linguistic families, were one of the largest groups of indigenous peoples in Brazil before its colonization. Scholars believe that while they first settled in the Amazon rainforest, from about 2,900 years ago the Tupi started to migrate southward and gradually occupied the Atlantic coast of Southeast Brazil.

  9. Brazilian diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_diaspora

    The Brazilian diaspora is the migration of Brazilians to other countries, a mostly recent phenomenon that has been driven mainly by economic recession and hyperinflation that afflicted Brazil in the 1980s and early 1990s, and since 2014, by the political and economic crisis that culminated in the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff in 2016 and the election of Jair Bolsonaro in 2018, as well as the ...