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Brutalidade Jardim: a Tropicália e o Surgimento da Contracultura Brasileira

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No final da década de 1960, artistas brasileiros consolidaram um movimento cultural divisor de águas conhecido como Tropicália. Atualmente, a música inspirada por esse movimento tem recebido considerável atenção tanto no Brasil quanto no exterior. Poucos novos ouvintes, contudo, conhecem a relação entre essa música e as circunstâncias por trás de sua criação, a fase mais violenta e repressiva do regime militar que governou o Brasil de 1964 a 1985. Com importantes manifestações no teatro, cinema, artes visuais, literatura e especialmente na música popular, a Tropicália articulou com dinamismo os conflitos e aspirações de uma geração de jovens brasileiros urbanos. Concentrando-se em um grupo de músicos da Bahia, um estado empobrecido do Nordeste conhecido pela vibrante cultura afro-brasileira, Christopher Dunn revela como artistas brasileiros incluindo Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa e Tom Zé criaram esse movimento em sintonia com a vanguarda musical e poética de São Paulo, a cidade mais moderna e industrializada do Brasil. O autor mostra como os tropicalistas se apropriaram seletivamente das práticas culturais do Brasil e do exterior e as parodiaram para expor a fissura entre a imagem idealizada do Brasil como um tranquilo "jardim" tropical e a brutalidade vivenciada diariamente por seus cidadãos.

280 pages, Paperback

First published October 15, 2001

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Christopher Dunn

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5 stars
44 (34%)
4 stars
64 (49%)
3 stars
17 (13%)
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3 (2%)
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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Timantha.
6 reviews
November 23, 2012
This was a very thoroughly researched, extremely informative work on the extensive history of the musical movement known as Tropicalia in Brazil in the 1960s-early '70s (and beyond)and the greater social, racial, ethnic, political, and economic contexts in which it was bred, as well as its lasting effects on questions of national identity, racial politics, the legacy of European colonialism and American neocolonialism, etc. in Brazil. I would have loved to have given this 5 stars. However, there were a few too many misspellings and grammatical errors for this sort of publication (or any publication). For example, the author mentions Billie Holiday as one of the many African-American musical influences on the Afro-Bahian aesthetic of the Brazilian counter-cultural movement in the 1970s and he spells her first name "Billy"? Come on....
Profile Image for Phil Overeem.
637 reviews24 followers
April 23, 2016
At times this inflicts the grinding style of academia upon the reader, but this is also THE place to get the lowdown on one of the most fascinating musical (make that artistic) movements of the 20th century. I learned a ton.
55 reviews
March 3, 2009
A nice description of Brazilian political and social history through the sounds of the Tropicalia movement.

Covers a lot more than just the music of Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Os Mutantes etc. but the descriptions of the politics and social movements of the latter half of the 20th century put the music in context.

I thought it was a good companion to the BBC 4 documentaries (Brazil, Brazil) you can find on Youtube.

10 reviews7 followers
March 11, 2015
This book is well written and the content is articulated in a clear and organized way. I learned quite a bit about Tropicalia during the 60's and the counterculture in Brazil in the 70's; the content is very factual. It probably helps to have previous interest in Brazilian culture and music to think this book as interesting rather than dry and factual.
Profile Image for Amy.
48 reviews
April 24, 2017
Incredibly well researched and in-depth monograph. Would recommend not only to those interested in Brazilian counterculture, but those also into European and American counter cultural movements. It will also introduce you to some incredible music as well!
Profile Image for Dan.
18 reviews12 followers
December 31, 2007
This is an awesome book, great background behind Os Mutantes, Caetano Veloso, Jorge Ben, Gal Costa, and other Tropicalia luminaries.
Profile Image for Garret Shields.
334 reviews3 followers
June 27, 2019
While not necessarily a page-turner, still very readable. Christopher Dunn is a well-respected writer for a reason! An insightful and informative look into the tropicalia movement. I learned a great deal and would recommend it to others. Shows how tropicalia was a product of the movements that preceded it, and how it has affected Brazilian culture sense. I appreciated that and also examined the visual art, not just the music of tropicalia.
Profile Image for Garrett G.
2 reviews
April 3, 2024
A pretty solid coverage of the tropicalia movement. Some other people have noted that it’s pretty academia based and that it sometimes is a little exhausting and i’d only agree a little bit. The beginning gives an introduction to the literary movements that took place in the beginning of the 20th century and I thought it did a great job of giving artistic context to the movement. Overall, I enjoyed reading this book!
Profile Image for Hadley.
90 reviews1 follower
December 8, 2023
I read this for novel research and learned so much. Highly recommend if you are interested in Brazilian counterculture/music/social history. Lots of bonkers anecdotes about the military dictatorship as well.
Profile Image for Peter Rowe.
122 reviews
Currently reading
June 10, 2024
mad informative Caetano Veloso Mad SUs I fw the Book Though
Profile Image for Jules.
142 reviews
December 25, 2024
Very informative introduction to the politics and history of Tropicalia; definitely worth it to listen along to all the songs discussed as you read.
Profile Image for John :D.
22 reviews
August 1, 2025
Big ups Chris, got hella good music recommendations and learned a lot. Slogs on a little bit too much towards the end and I could not recommend this to everybody but is a very informative read if you fw the music that goes along with it
Profile Image for Dave Pier.
157 reviews4 followers
June 4, 2015
Solid overview of an important musical movement.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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