James P. Woodard's history of consumer capitalism in Brazil, today the
world's fifth most populous country, is at once magisterial, intimate,
and penetrating enough to serve as a history of modern Brazil itself. It
tells how a new economic outlook took hold over the course of the
twentieth century, a time when the United States became Brazil's most
important trading partner and the tastemaker of its better-heeled
citizens. In a cultural entangling with the United States, Brazilians
saw Chevrolets and Fords replace horse-drawn carriages, railroads lose
to a mania for cheap automobile roads, and the fabric of everyday
existence rewoven as commerce reached into the deepest spheres of family
life.
The United States loomed large in this economic transformation, but
American consumer culture was not merely imposed on Brazilians. By the
seventies, many elements once thought of as American had slipped their
exotic traces and become Brazilian, and this process illuminates how the
culture of consumer capitalism became a more genuinely transnational and
globalized phenomenon. This commercial and cultural turn is the great
untold story of Brazil's twentieth century, and one key to its
twenty-first.