Fascismo à Brasileira by Pedro Doria

A historical and political investigation of how European-style fascist ideas were adapted to Brazil, tracing the rise of Integralism in the 1930s, its confrontations with rivals and the Vargas regime, and the afterlife of its networks and myths across the military dictatorship and into the digital age. It shows how nationalism, religious traditionalism, anti-communism, paramilitary aesthetics, and mass propaganda techniques forged a distinctly local variant that never fully disappeared, reemerging in contemporary right-wing mobilization and offering a framework to understand recent Brazilian political radicalization.