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About the Brazil Center

The University of Texas is home to one of the most comprehensive Brazilian Studies program in the United States.  The Brazil Center's mission is to promote and coordinate Brazilian studies at The University of Texas and awareness of Brazil and Brazilian culture in the broader Central Texas community. In pursuit of this mission, the Brazil Center has established several goals:

Background

The Brazil Center was inaugurated in fall 1995 as an autonomous unit under the umbrella of the Institute of Latin American Studies, following twenty-five years of work by the Institute’s Brazilian Studies Committee to diversify and expand interdisciplinary studies of Brazil on the Austin campus and to increase the number of faculty specializing in Brazil.

As early as 1973, respected UT professor Fred Ellison of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese was examining ways to strengthen Portuguese language and Brazilian studies as chair of the Task Force to Promote Portuguese Studies in the United States. Several well-regarded faculty members were active in the BSC over the years, including Jacqueline Barnitz (Art and Art History), Gerard Béhague (Music), John Dulles (American Studies), Richard Graham (History), David Jackson (Spanish and Portuguese), Fritz Hensey (Spanish and Portuguese), Greg Urban (Anthropology), and Robert Wilson (LBJ School). Fred Ellison and Lawrence Graham played key roles in the development of Brazilian studies at UT throughout their long careers at the University.

Annual Reports on Brazilian Studies at UT

1998-99 (PDF, 92K) | 1999-2000 (PDF, 93K) | 2000-01 (PDF, 53K) | 2001-02 (PDF, 24MB) | 2002-03 (PDF, 11MB) | 2003-04 (PDF, 8MB)

To sign up for our weekly e-newsletter of Brazil-related events at UT and around Austin, e-mail brazil@uts.cc.utexas.edu.