For more than half a century, the Brazilian army used fear and
censorship to erase aspects of its history from public memory and
to create its own political myths. Although the military had
remarkable success in promoting its version of events, recent
democratization has allowed scholars access to new materials with
which to challenge the "official story." Drawing on oral histories,
secret police documents, memoirs of dissident officers, army
records, and other sources only recently made available, Shawn
Smallman crafts a compelling, revisionist interpretation of
Brazil's political history from 1889 to 1954.
Smallman examines the topics the Brazilian military wished to
obscure--racial politics and terror campaigns, institutional
corruption and civil-military alliances, political torture and
personal rivalries--to understand the army's growing involvement in
civilian affairs. Among the myths he confronts are the military's
idealized rendition of its racial policies and its portrayal of
itself as above the corruption associated with politicians. His
account not only illuminates the origins of the military
government's repressive and often brutal actions during the 1960s
and 1970s but also carries implications for contemporary Brazil, as
the armed forces debate their role in a democratic country.