Florestan Fernandes

Florestan Fernandes
Personal details
Born 22 July 1920
São Paulo, Brazil
Died 10 August 1995
São Paulo, Brazil

Florestan Fernandes (July 22, 1920 – August 10, 1995) was a Brazilian sociologist and politician. He was also elected federal deputy twice.

Life and career

He came from a poor family with his mother being a "washerwoman". In youth he took a series of odd jobs and had an erratic education until he attended the university in 1941. In 1945 he graduated and by 1964 was a full professor in sociology. In that same year he won the Prêmio Jabuti. In 1969 he fled to Canada for political reasons and began to teach at the University of Toronto. In 1986 he returned to Brazil and became involved in the Partido dos Trabalhadores.[1] In his treatment of Marxism, he is known for presenting hybrid views that diverged from orthodox theory and from conventional leftist practical concessions. His name is closely associated with the modernization of sociological research in Brazil and Latin America. A sociologist and university professor with more than 50 published works, he transformed social thought in Brazil and established a new standard of sociological research characterized by analytical and critical rigor. He also advanced a new level of intellectual performance. At 75 he died of an embolism related to liver trouble and dialysis treatment.

References

  1. Florestan Fernandes revisited


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