Dissertação
Revolução e realidade social na imprensa trotskista brasileira dos anos 1930
Fecha
2014-03-10Registro en:
LISBOA, Roberto Borges. REVOLUTION AND SOCIAL REALITY BRAZILIAN TROTSKYIST PRESS IN THE 1930S. 2014. 160 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em História) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2014.
Autor
Lisboa, Roberto Borges
Institución
Resumen
The historiography of Communist dissidents of the Communist Party of Brazil is linked
mostly to making studies on the trajectory of their political organizations aligned to the
International Left Opposition, the Internationalist Communist League (odd period in the
Communist International) and the Fourth International (period which assumes decisively the
party way). To a lesser extent, it focused on specific moments of life and political criticism of
those aligned to Leon Trotsky (the "1930 Revolution", the antifascist struggle and uprisings of
1935). The initiative to minimally modify "the current state of things" led to questioning of
his political press and particularly its itinerary in the 1930s. In a way, the viewing of little
aspects present in the current historiography enabled recounting a live track (despite the
time limit on the amount of available sources and information) from two issues we define as
"revolution and social reality". The breadth and general condition of these two axes allowed
making contact with the Trotskyist newspapers and newsletters (available digitally by the
Documentation Centre of the Movement Worker Mario Pedrosa belonging to the
Documentation Centre and Memory from Universidade Estadual Paulista) and specifying
them. Belonging to the line of research entitled "Migration and Labour , this dissertation
defined the focus of two consecutive movements for the established axis. While the former
sought to identify the key themes of the international Trotskyist revolution passed by the
Brazilian Trotskyist press (the Soviet Union , the Communist International , War and
Fascism) and highlight the theoretical and political content raised by these from the
movement flow of ideas from other "stops" while the second sought to reflect on the world of
work linked to social reality, particularly on capitalist development in Brazil, the trade union
and labor laws erected and political dynamics of the working class in the 1930s . In short, I
hope that this work will contribute to enrich the theme of Brazilian Trotskyists in the 1930s
from redirecting the form of a dialogue of the historian with its object and source of research.