{"id":317805,"date":"2021-09-19T13:50:51","date_gmt":"2021-09-19T13:50:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jacobinmag.com\/2021\/09\/paulo-freires-100-inequality-literacy-illiteracy-working-class-disenfranchisement-brazilian-politics\/"},"modified":"2021-09-19T14:09:34","modified_gmt":"2021-09-19T14:09:34","slug":"paulo-freires-radical-method-was-rooted-in-brazils-historical-inequalities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/09\/19\/paulo-freires-radical-method-was-rooted-in-brazils-historical-inequalities\/","title":{"rendered":"Paulo Freire\u2019s Radical Method Was Rooted in Brazil\u2019s Historical Inequalities"},"content":{"rendered":"\n \n\n\n\n

Paulo Freire, who was born one hundred years ago today, came of age in a country where half of all adults were illiterate and therefore disenfranchised. Freire\u2019s ideas were forged in a uniquely Brazilian context.<\/h3>\n\n\n
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\n Paulo Freire, 1963. (Brazilian National Archives)\n <\/figcaption> \n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n\n \n

In 2012, Dilma Rousseff signed into law Decree No. 12.612, making socialist pedagogue Paulo Freire the official patron of education in Brazil. It was a fitting tribute to one of the international left\u2019s most beloved icons, and a seemingly uncontroversial one considering the grandfatherly Freire, who today would have turned one hundred years old, is among the country\u2019s most celebrated intellectuals.<\/p>\n

However, from the moment pen touched paper, Rousseff\u2019s decree has set off a firestorm of criticism. Reaching a fever pitch after Jair Bolsonaro\u2019s victory in the 2018 presidential election, the controversy around Freire\u2019s influence has become a topic of heated national discussion and the fuel for countless right-wing conspiracies of \u201cMarxist indoctrination.\u201d<\/p>\n

What, though, does the battle over Freire actually tell us about the state of Brazilian society in 2021? What does it tell us about the meaning of Freire\u2019s legacy on the centennial of his birth?<\/p>\n

Considering his political accomplishments at home were always overshadowed by his intellectual reputation abroad, it seems odd to even be debating Freire\u2019s status in Brazil. In the late 1960s, having been exiled by the military dictatorship, Freire was greeted with widespread international acclaim for his radical approach to pedagogy and his innovative methods for promoting literacy among the world\u2019s most disenfranchised. His writings \u2014 including the global best seller Pedagogy of the Oppressed<\/em> \u2014 were immediately published in English and began to attract the attention of educators and young people in the United States and Europe. Ironically, for a thinker who had always emphasized the importance of social context, Freire\u2019s method was often prone to distortions by overly enthusiastic pedagogues in the North who imagined his radical methods as a panacea for any and all social ills.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, in Brazil, the extent of Freire\u2019s influence has been subject to a different kind of distortion. For one, the \u201cpatron\u201d honorific awarded by Rousseff has led many \u2014 not just the Right \u2014 to mistakenly think that there once existed some kind of overarching Freire-inspired national education policy. In fact, Freirean pedagogy has never held any major influence over the country\u2019s educational system \u2014 not even in the era of re-democratization, when Freire had a hand in shaping public policy. The one time Freire came close to heading a far-reaching national literacy campaign, the government was \u2014 tellingly \u2014 overthrown by the armed forces.<\/p>\n

Following his return from exile in 1980, Freire did work as a university professor and served as secretary of education in S\u00e3o Paulo for the socialist mayor Luiza Erundina (1989\u20131991), then affiliated with the Workers\u2019 Party (PT). But those initiatives were limited to the municipality of S\u00e3o Paulo. Moreover, during its thirteen years in government, and despite achieving important progressive advances in higher education, the PT never managed to reform primary or secondary education \u2014 where Freire\u2019s methodology could easily have assumed national prominence.<\/p>\n

The question is: Why has the far right been up in arms over an almost completely fictional Freirean influence in Brazilian education? One answer lies in the country\u2019s history: accusations of left-wing indoctrination through grade-level instruction have been a common practice in Brazil since the beginning of the dictatorship in the 1960s. That tactic lives on with figures like Olavo de Carvalho, who, writing about \u201cGramscian indoctrination\u201d and \u201ccultural Marxism,\u201d insists that \u201cif Lenin was the theorist of the putsch, [Gramsci] was the strategist of a psychological revolution paving the way to the coup d\u2019\u00e9tat.\u201d Carvalho\u2019s equation of the Gramscian concept of \u201ccounter-hegemony\u201d with brainwashing and the undermining of Western values is pat far-right culture-war fodder. But where Freire\u2019s place in Brazilian history is concerned, there\u2019s more to the story.<\/p>\n