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Patterns of Living in the U.S. and Brazil: A Comparison*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Extract

The writer will attempt to draw attention to major like and unlike elements in the cultural patterns of Brazil and the United States, with an eye to mutual understanding. Obviously, this constitutes a task of considerable magnitude, and much reflection was required in order to decide which of the many possibilities should receive attention. Finally, it was decided to center on the following four aspects of the general subject: (1) the diversity of patterns of living in the United States, and the even greater diversity of ways of life in Brazil; (2) the higher degree of social differentiation in the United States, in comparison with contemporary Brazil; (3) the similarities and differences in patterns of living which result from the class structures found in the respective societies; and (4) the effects upon general social and cultural patterns of the institutions which have played the most important roles in producing the distinguishing characteristics of each of the societies: in the case of Brazil, the great patriarchial family or kinship unit, and in the case of the United States, the public school.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1961

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Footnotes

*

Based on a paper read at Columbia University, 1959.

References

1 “O Povo Brasileiro e sua Evolução,” Recenseamento do Brasil, 1920, I, Rio de Janeiro, 1922, p. 282.

2 Even in cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo there are apartment houses inhabited entirely by those closely related to one another, and throughout the week family obligations may make it impossible for many professional and business members of such families to accept outside social engagements.