Título: | PUTTING BRAZIL IN FRONT OF THE MIRROR: LULA S FOREIGN POLICY AND BRAZIL S BIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES | ||||||||||||
Autor: |
CAMILA AMORIM JARDIM |
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Colaborador(es): |
STEFANO GUZZINI - Orientador MARTA REGINA FERNANDEZ Y GARCIA MORENO - Coorientador |
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Catalogação: | 11/AGO/2022 | Língua(s): | ENGLISH - UNITED STATES |
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Tipo: | TEXT | Subtipo: | THESIS | ||||||||||
Notas: |
[pt] Todos os dados constantes dos documentos são de inteira responsabilidade de seus autores. Os dados utilizados nas descrições dos documentos estão em conformidade com os sistemas da administração da PUC-Rio. [en] All data contained in the documents are the sole responsibility of the authors. The data used in the descriptions of the documents are in conformity with the systems of the administration of PUC-Rio. |
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Referência(s): |
[pt] https://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/projetosEspeciais/ETDs/consultas/conteudo.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=60138&idi=1 [en] https://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/projetosEspeciais/ETDs/consultas/conteudo.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=60138&idi=2 |
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DOI: | https://doi.org/10.17771/PUCRio.acad.60138 | ||||||||||||
Resumo: | |||||||||||||
Lula da Silva s government (2003-2010) has been approached in Brazilian
Foreign Policy Analysis (BFPA) mainly under a framework of change versus
continuity. Nonetheless, the way the area assesses change and continuity might need
to be framed differently and, if either change or continuity are found, it might be of a
different kind than the literature has established so far. An illustrative result of this is a
reduced capacity of the field to understand the recent turn towards the far-right in Brazil
and how the strong polarization and memory disputes over the Lula and Dilma
governments could relate to foreign policy, for example. Those recent movements seem
to defy the regular cost-benefit calculus, as well as to consider the deep influence
between domestic discourses of identity and official Foreign Policy. Therefore, I
propose to look at post-structuralist and constructivist approaches to foreign policy and
identity and national biographies that analyze foreign policy discourses in the context
of a Lacanian ontology of lack and anxiety, which leads to the country s continuous
search for (impossible) stability and ontological (in)security. Understanding foreign
policy as discursive practices drawing frontiers between the domestic and the
international and the biographical narratives of past, present, and desired future, the
literature suggests a central role to master signifiers and the libidinal investments over
them. Henceforth, the main contribution of this thesis is presenting the (re)construction
of Brazilian biographical narratives under the lenses of the analysts of BFPA, which
includes both politicians and academicians, aiming to map the master signifiers around
which their hegemonic narratives circulate. According to the field, the master signifiers
found guiding Brazil s hegemonic biographical narratives were miscegenation/racial
democracy, legalism/pacifism, development, and autonomy. Around those, many other
relevant ones circulate. Later on, those master signifiers and their chains of significance
were contrasted to the official BFP discourses during Lula, trying to understand if and
to what extent Lula s Foreign Policy discourses could have dislocated meaning over
Brazilian identity narratives. This thesis pays special attention to racial discourses and
their relation to a sense of ontological insecurity of the Brazilian self. Not aiming to
present definitive answers to the matter and finding many elements of complexity and
discursive ambiguity during Lula, also taking into consideration the sliding/shifting
nature of signifiers, one of the main objectives of this work is to show the constructive
role of the BFPA academia in Brazil’s understandings of its biographical narratives.
Another central goal is to explore how the realm of domestic identity discourses, part
of foreign policy, actively inform and/or limit official Foreign Policy and how this one
influences back Brazil s domestic understandings of self and other (foreign policy).
Such an approach disrupts the traditional idea of Foreign Policy as a bridge between
the domestic and the international. Differently, takes it as a discursive construction
entrenched to libidinal and imaginary narratives, anchored by master (and sliding)
signifiers, of its self or ego, as well as the ideal of the ego and the others.
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