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61 Pol. Sci. Q. 1 (1946)

handle is hein.journals/pclscceqry61 and id is 1 raw text is: 



Volume  L XI]


        POLITICAL SCIENCE


                 QUARTERLY

        THE   DESTINY OF THE NEGRO IN THE
                 WESTERN HEMISPHERE


 T HE settling of   the western hemisphere by peoples coming
         from Europe and Africa was an adventure on a grand
         scale, involving diverse peoples, varying cultures, mil-
 lions of human beings, and hundreds of years. The common
 element was the New World.  Its physical features and cultural
 types were strangely dissimilar, but the student discerns many
 an analogous design, patterned by the newcomers as they estab-
 lished themselves in the strange and unexplored regions. It is
 natural, therefore, for Gilberto Freyre to draw revealing sim-
 ilarities between the history of Brazil and the United States.'
 Like everything that he writes, this volume has a freshness and
 a lucidity that endow the reader with insight and understanding
 of the complex instrumentalities for life and labor contrived by
 man in his new  world.  Freyre finds in the development of
 Brazil, for example, the impact of the frontier and the dominion
 of the plantation so typical of our own South. The disparity,
 implied rather than expressed in the study, is the divergent posi-
 tion of the Negro within the two areas. For the Negro-and
 especially the Mulatto-had an access to the culture in Brazil,
 and a r6le in social life, unknown in the United States. In poli-
 tics, in the arts and in society, the Mulatto found the door ajar
 even if not fully open, and a markedly different social milieu
 has come into being. Even under the Empire, the Negro and
 the Mulatto-and,  socially, the attractive Mulatto women-
 found an acceptance unthinkable in the North American scene.
 Freyre quotes from Ewbank this revealing picture:
 1 Gilberto Freyre, Brazil: An Interpretation. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1945.
vii, 179, ix pp. $2.00.


(1)


[Number r


March   1946

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