Confrontations with the national flag by the contemporary Brazilian cinema

During the 2010s, of all the Brazilian national symbols - among them the national anthem and the canary shirt of the Brazilian national football team - the green and yellow flag was possibly the one that suffered the most oscillations in terms of its relationship with the idea of national identity....

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Bibliographic Details
Author: Almeida, Ana Caroline de
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2022
Country:Brasil
Institution:Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF)
Repository:Mídia.e.Cotidiano
Language:Portuguese
OAI Identifier:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/53211
Online Access:https://periodicos.uff.br/midiaecotidiano/article/view/53211
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:bandera brasileña
cine brasileño
evidencias
bandeira brasileira
cinema brasileiro
evidências
brazilian flag
brazilian cinema
evidences
Description
Summary:During the 2010s, of all the Brazilian national symbols - among them the national anthem and the canary shirt of the Brazilian national football team - the green and yellow flag was possibly the one that suffered the most oscillations in terms of its relationship with the idea of national identity. The political turmoil that affected the country particularly after the so-called Journeys of June in 2013 caused this object to be re-signified, and it gradually became more associated with conservative forces. During this period, Brazilian independent cinema catalyzed the discomfort of critical thinking with the use and appropriation of this symbol which, like many other flags and anthems, were created to forge national identities during the transition from monarchical to republican governments. Using four films- Branco sai preto fica (2014), de Adirley Queirós, No coração do mundo (2019), de Maurílio Martins e Gabriel Martins, Divino amor (2019), de Gabriel Mascaro e Martírio (2016), de Vincent Carelli, Ernesto de Carvalho e Tita - this article intends to observe how, when placed as a background image, almost imperceptible, but always noticed, the figuration of the Brazilian flag produces evidence against itself, in the sense of appearing on the scene as a direct confrontation with its official discourse.