Abstract

This article reviews notes on the Brazilian social formation with regard to the relationship between the State and black people, taking into consideration the aspects of heteronomy, authoritarianism and systematic violence imputed / conferred to this segment in Brazil. It shows how this is reissued in the country as a sine qua non condition for the dependence and subordination relationship to the big world capital. It highlights the functionality of the myth of racial democracy that distorts the condition of citizenship of this part of society through non-access to public rights and policies. It discusses the permanencies and the search for ruptures that allow tensioning of the State towards overcoming racism, its challenges and limits in the overcoming of class society.

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