San Tiago Dantas: ideias e rumos para a Revolução Brasileira (1929-1964)
Resumen
Francisco Clementino de San Tiago Dantas (1911-1964) was a jurist, politician and
intellectual from Rio de Janeiro who played an important role in Brazilian public life between
1929 and 1964. His intellectual production and political action are deeply connected to the
construction of the centralized national State in Brazil and to the country’s transition from
agrarian to urban, industrial society. Similar to several other intellectuals of his generation,
San Tiago Dantas began his trajectory linked to the Brazilian Integralist Action (a fascist
inspired movement), converting to the democratic and developmental field after World War II
and becoming a leader and an ideologist of the Brazilian Labor Party in the 1950s and 1960s.
The objective of this thesis is to investigate Dantas social trajectory - highlighting his
networks of relationships and attachment to groups - and his intellectual production - seeking
to map his theoretical and political-ideological formulations - in the period from 1929 to
1964. In the research, I used published and unpublished texts by the author (books, speeches,
manuscripts, interviews, transcripts of classes and courses), correspondence sent and
received, memories and interviews of contemporary characters and newspaper and magazine
reports. The analysis of this material allowed the identification of three political-ideological
phases in the trajectory of San Tiago Dantas, described in this thesis: 1) catholic/ integralist
(1929-1945); 2) non-nationalist developmentalist (1945-1955); 3) laborist/reformist
developmentalist (1955-1964).
Colecciones
El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: