In the 50s and 60s, Brazilian intellectuals and artists dreamed of a resistance project for the country. Did the dream fade away or was the cause not good? The answer is in the interview given to Jornal da Unicamp by sociologist Marcelo Ridenti, professor at IFCH and author of the book In search of the Brazilian people - artists of the revolution, of the CPC - the era of TV, a work that shows the trajectory A range of artists and intellectuals committed to popular roots and the fight against underdevelopment in the 1960s and 1970s.
Innovation Law
Expansion of vacancies
Innovation in Cuba
Innovative Technology
Brazilian Intellectual Project
The dream is over
The national coffee
priest football
Sebrae Challenge
Environment
Cartoon
Mouth of dreams
In his doctoral thesis, filmmaker Nuno Cesar Abreu takes a "generous look" at the cinema of Boca de Lixo. Former actress Matilde Mastrangi, interviewed in the research, sees the pornochanchada industry as a portrait of cultural mediocrity in dictatorship Brazil.

Contrary to what the official story says, the person who introduced football in Brazil was not Charles Miller, a Brazilian son of English parents. The pioneering spirit was carried out by Jesuit priests who learned about the sport in schools in Europe and brought it to Brazilian Catholic schools, including the Col�gio S�o Lu�s, in Itu.
Company incubated at Unicamp
develops control device
access that will be produced in
industrial scale.