Andrew G. Britt is Assistant Professor in the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies at the University of Texas.
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Acknowledgments ix Introduction. The Paradoxes of Ethnoracial Space 1 1. Avenues and the Afterlives of Slavery 34 2. Spatial Projects of Forgetting 81 3. Neighborhoods of Mixture and Massacre 148 4. Belonging-as-Being: BrasilAndia as "Little Africa" 199 5. Producing Ethnoracial Infrastructures: Making "Japanese" Liberdade and "Italian" Bexiga 241 Epilogue. Early 1970s: "Asphalt Has Today Covered Our Ground" 288 Notes 299 Bibliography 349 Index 377
"I'll Samba Someplace Else is an outstanding book that offers a fresh perspective on the ways in which race and ethnicity have been inscribed into the urban geography, shaping vast inequalities in Sao Paulo over the past century."-Bryan McCann, author of, Hard Times in the Marvelous City "Britt's project is a uniquely comprehensive retracing of the destruction left by municipal building projects and the spaces that Black Paulistanos have continued to make despite attempts at erasure. . . . [I'll Samba Someplace Else] offers a valuable blueprint for mapping racism through critical geography and serves as a model for students and educators interested in using digital humanities tools to map urban ethnoracial spaces."-Amy Richards, NACLA

