Raymundo Faoro Explained

Raimundo Faoro
Birth Date:1925
Death Date:2003
Occupation:Lawyer, jurist, sociologist, historian, writer

Raymundo Faoro (27 April 1925, in Vacaria – 15 May 2003, in Rio de Janeiro) was a lawyer, jurist, sociologist, historian, writer and president of the Brazilian Bar Association (OAB). Even though lawyers have an extensive presence in the political arena of Brazil, not one president after Faoro gained the same intellectual respect as he did.

Faoro was the author of several books. The most important of all was "Os Donos do Poder" (The Owners of Power). In this book, Faoro describes the history of power in Brazilian history, from the pre-colonial times to approximately the end of Getúlio Vargas's first term.

In this book, Faoro gave special attention to the "estamento", or Stand, which he notes was a classification used by Karl Marx but mistranslated in the English and French translations of his German work.[1] This "Stand", which he differentiates clearly from the ruling "Elite", was dominant in the creation of modern Brazil. According to Faoro, this "Stand", a strange mixture of the nobility, the bureaucrats and the military, always attempted to use the power and wealth of the State in self benefit, so preventing the masses from ruling the country in benefit of the majority.

He also wrote books on Brazilian social and political thought, on the writer and poet Machado de Assis and Brazilian modern society and politics.

Faoro's book became one of the reference points for the understanding of Brazilian society and influenced Brazilian and Brazilianist sociology, historiography and political science. Other books which gained such recognition were Sergio Buarque de Holanda's Raizes do Brasil, Gilberto Freyre's Casa Grande e Senzala and Caio Prado Junior's Formação do Brasil Contemporâneo.

References

Notes and References

  1. Chapter 2 "A Revolução Portuguesa" Note 16 IN Pg 68 of Os Donos Do Poder 6th Edition 1984