Participant Info

First Name
Ana Flávia
Last Name
Magalhães Pinto
Affiliation
University of Brasília (UnB)
Website URL
Keywords
Black Freedom and Citizenship, Black Press, African Diaspora, Black Intellectuals, Brazil, Puerto Rico
Additional Contact Information

Personal Info

Photo
About Me

Ana Flávia Magalhães Pinto is an adjunct professor in the Department of History at the University of Brasilia (UnB). She is a PhD and postdoctor in History by State University of Campinas (Unicamp); master in History by UnB; bachelor of Journalism from UniCEUB; and did licenciate in History at Unip. From the first graduation, she develops research articulating knowledge of the areas of History, Communication, Literature and Education, with emphasis on: political-cultural performance of black thinkers, black press, abolitionism and experiences of black freedom and citizenship in the period slavery and post-abolition in Brazil and elsewhere in the African Diaspora.

Recent Publications

PINTO, Ana Flávia Magalhães; FREITAS, Felipe. S. Luiza Bairros, uma “bem lembrada” entre nós (1953-2016). Afro-Ásia, n. 55, p. 215-256, 2017. Disponível em: https://portalseer.ufba.br/index.php/afroasia/article/view/24316/15379.

PINTO, Ana Flávia Magalhães; DECHEN, Chaia; FERNANDES, Jaqueline (orgs.). Griôs da Diáspora Negra. Brasília: Griô, 2017.

PINTO, Ana Flávia Magalhães; CHALHOUB, Sidney (orgs.). Pensadores negros – pensadoras negras, Brasil, séculos XIX e XX. Rio de Janeiro; Belo Horizonte: MC&G Editorial; Editora Fino Traço, 2016.

PINTO, Ana Flávia Magalhães. Caminhos da cidadania: trabalhadores de baixo prestígio e alistamento eleitoral na freguesia da Sé em São Paulo, 1890-1892. Revista do Arquivo Geral da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro, n. 9, p. 143-158, 2015.

 

Media Coverage
Country Focus
Brazil and Puerto Rico
Expertise by Geography
Caribbean, Latin America, North America
Expertise by Chronology
19th century, 20th century, 21st century
Expertise by Topic
Colonialism, Emancipation, Gender, Human Rights, Public History, Race, Slavery, Urban History, Women