Living and Dying in São Paulo

Immigrants, Health, and the Built Environment in Brazil

Jeffrey Lesser author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Duke University Press

Publishing:15th Apr '25

£23.99

This title is due to be published on 15th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Living and Dying in São Paulo cover

There is a saying in Brazil: “Mosquitos are democratic: they bite the rich and the poor alike.” Why then is bad health, from violence to respiratory disease and malaria to dengue, dispersed unevenly across difference social and national groups? In Living and Dying in São Paulo, Jeffrey Lesser focuses on the Bom Retiro neighborhood to explore such questions by examining the competing visions of wellbeing in Brazil among racialized immigrants and policymakers and health officials. He analyzes the fraught relationship between Bom Retiro residents the state and healthcare agencies that have overseen community sanitation efforts since the mid-nineteenth century, drawing out the connected systems of the built environment, public health laws and practices, and citizenship. Lesser employs the concept of “residues” to outline how continuing historical material, legislative, and social legacies structure contemporary daily life and health outcomes in the neighborhood. In so doing, Lesser creates a dialogue between the past and present, showing how the relationship between culture and disease is both layered and interconnected.

Living and Dying in São Paulo is methodologically innovative, conceptually powerful, and engagingly written. Jeffrey Lesser’s book has rare precision and creativity. Not only does he give an insightful reading of place and people, he also makes a bold case for historians to adopt new approaches and for those in the social and biomedical sciences to pose questions historically. This is the kind of writing I am sure most historians—myself included—wish they could do.” -- Jerry Dávila, author of * Hotel Trópico: Brazil and the Challenge of African Decolonization, 1950–1980 *
“Drawing on historically grounded and community-based research of public health in São Paulo’s Bom Retiro neighborhood, Jeffrey Lesser outlines the close relationship between public health programs and racialized anxieties directed at poor black and immigrant communities to show how class stigmatization and ethnic stereotyping have complicated official efforts to effectively engage with the community. Timely and urgent, Living and Dying in São Paulo is a superior work of scholarship by a leading historian of Brazil.” -- Christopher Dunn, author of * Contracultura: Alternative Arts and Social Transformation in Authoritarian Brazil *

ISBN: 9781478030980

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 445g

328 pages