Foundations of Race in Brazil
Culture & Resistance
Society & Inequality
Slavery & Economy
Power, Identity & Ideology
100

This concept describes Brazil’s belief that racial mixing eliminated racism

A. Segregation state
B. Racial democracy
C. Ethnic nationalism
D. Color apartheid

What is racial democracy?

100

This Afro-Brazilian martial art was disguised as dance

A. Samba
B. Capoeira
C. Jiu-jitsu
D. Maculelê

What is capoeira?

100

This racial group dominates Brazilian media representation

A. Black Brazilians
B. Indigenous Brazilians
C. White Brazilians
D. Mixed-race Brazilians

Who are white Brazilians?

100

This feature made Brazilian slavery especially brutal due to replaceability.

A. Strict laws
B. Easy access to enslaved labor
C. Religious influence
D. Industrialization

What is easy access to enslaved labor?

100

This policy promoted European immigration to “whiten” Brazil.

A. Integration policy
B. Whitening policy
C. Segregation law
D. Cultural reform

What is the whitening policy?

200

This system allows Brazilians to identify using many different color labels.

A. Government classification
B. Scientific taxonomy
C. Self-described racial identification system
D. Binary race system

What is a self-described racial identification system?

200

This religion blends African traditions with Catholicism.

A. Vodou
B. Santería
C. Candomblé
D. Umbanda

What is Candomblé?

200

This policy aims to address racial inequality in education.

A. Immigration reform
B. Affirmative action
C. Tax reform
D. Welfare policy

What is affirmative action?

200

This region became wealthy due to gold and diamond mining.

A. Bahia
B. São Paulo
C. Minas Gerais
D. Rio Grande do Sul

What is Minas Gerais?

200

This term refers to reducing Black identity through racial mixing.

A. Assimilation
B. Branqueamento
C. Nationalism
D. Integration

What is branqueamento?

300

This economic system drove Brazil to import the most enslaved Africans.

A. Cotton plantations
B. Sugar plantation economy
C. Mining exports
D. Industrial labor

What is the sugar plantation economy?

300

This survival strategy helped African religions persist under slavery.

A. Isolation
B. Syncretism
C. Conversion
D. Rebellion

What is syncretism?

300

This factor contributes to low self-esteem among Black women in Brazil.

A. Lack of education
B. Lack of representation in media
C. Government restrictions
D. Language barriers

What is lack of representation in media?

300

This type of social structure was more common in mining towns.

A. Strict segregation
B. Integrated racial living
C. No African presence
D. All enslaved labor

What is integrated racial living?

300

This artist argues racial inequality is often reframed as economic.

A. Pelé
B. MV Bill
C. Gilberto Gil
D. Neymar

Who is MV Bill?

400

This is the approximate number of Africans brought to Brazil.

A. 500,000
B. 1 million
C. 5 million
D. 20 million

What is 5 million?

400

This city is a major center of Afro-Brazilian culture.

A. Rio de Janeiro
B. São Paulo
C. Salvador da Bahia
D. Brasília

What is Salvador da Bahia?

400

These neighborhoods are disproportionately inhabited by Black Brazilians.

A. Suburbs
B. Favelas
C. Gated communities
D. Rural villages

What are favelas?

400

This demographic imbalance contributed to racial mixing in Brazil.

A. Lack of food
B. Lack of Portuguese women
C. Lack of labor
D. Lack of land

What is the lack of Portuguese women?

400

This scholar argues racial democracy is a myth masking inequality.

A. Freyre
B. Nascimento
C. Bonilla-Silva
D. Fanon

Who is Obvious Nascimento?

500

This year marks the abolition of slavery in Brazil.

A. 1776
B. 1865
C. 1888
D. 1901

What is 1888?

500

This national festival symbolizes multicultural blending in Brazil.

A. Festa Junina
B. Carnival
C. Independence Day
D. Semana Santa

What is Carnival?

500

This contradiction defines Brazil’s racial reality.

A. Wealth vs poverty
B. Democracy vs monarchy
C. Racial mixing vs inequality
D. Urban vs rural divide

What is racial mixing vs. racial inequality?

500

This explains how enslaved people sometimes gained freedom in mining regions.

A. Government programs
B. Military service
C. Buying freedom or being freed
D. Automatic release

What is buying freedom or being freed by owners?

500

This concept explains how Chica da Silva’s life reflects Brazilian society.

A. Total equality
B. Fixed identity
C. Complex race/class mobility
D. Cultural isolation

What are complex intersections of race, class, and freedom?

M
e
n
u