Marilena de Souza Chaui

Marilena de Souza Chaui

Chaui in 2010
Personal details
Born (1941-09-04) September 4, 1941
São Paulo, State of Sao Paulo
Profession philosopher, professor

Marilena de Souza Chaui (born September 4, 1941) is a female Brazilian philosopher and member of the Workers' Party.

She is the daughter of the journalist Nicholas Alberto Chaui, of Arabic origin, and teacher Laura de Souza Chaui. She was married to the journalist José Augusto de Mattos Berlinck, with whom she had two sons - William Joseph and Luciana. She is currently married to Michael Hall, a historian and professor at the State University of Campinas.

She is a Professor of Political Philosophy and History of Modern Philosophy in the University of São Paulo, having been awarded master's degree in 1967, and received her doctorate in 1971 with the essay "Introduction to Reading Spinoza", under the guidance of Professor Gilda de Mello e Souza Rocha. In 1977, he taught Philosophy in the University of São Paulo.

Her book "What is Ideology?" was selected by the Ministry of Education and Culture of Brazil as a mandatory textbook in public schools, becoming thus a bestseller with over a hundred thousand copies sold, well above the average of sales of didactic books in Brazil. Chaui had served as Municipal Secretary of Culture of São Paulo, from 1989 to 1992, during the administration of Luiza Erundina (1988-1992). In 2013, during the release of the book "10 Years of Post-Liberal Government in Brasil: Lula and Dilma", Marilena received a negative reception when during her speech she stated that : "It's because I hate the middle class. The middle class is a delay of life. The middle class is stupidity. It is what we have as the most reactionary, conservative, ignorant, cocky, arrogant, terrorist... The middle class is a political abomination, because it is fascist. It is an ethical abomination because it is violent. It is a cognitive abomination..." The video of her showing the speech has achieved repercussion through social medias at the time.

She has been accused by some as inciting hatred and using several derogatory terms against a portion of the population, particularly the middle class as being too reactionary, while praising the current president Dilma Rousseff and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and populist criticisms against the brazilian middle-class.

Partial Bibliography

She is the author of, among others,

References

    External links

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