Osvaldo Aranha
Osvaldo Aranha
Osvaldo Aranha (1894-1960) was a leading figure in the group of Brazilian politicians from Rio Grande do Sul who came to power with President Vargas in 1930. During the following 30 years, Aranha remained a major figure in Brazilian political life.
Osvaldo Aranha was born in Alegrete in the state of Rio Grande do Sul on Feb. 15, 1894. He graduated from the Porto Alegre Law School in 1916 and for some years practiced his profession.
During the 1920s Aranha served his apprenticeship in politics as mayor of the town of Alegrete, and he was
wounded fighting in defense of the state regime during a revolt in 1926. In 1927 he was elected a member of the state legislature, and in 1928 he became a member of the Federal Chamber of Deputies.
When Getulio Vargas became governor of Rio Grande do Sul in 1929, he chose Aranha to head his Cabinet as secretary of justice. In this capacity Aranha became the intermediary of Vargas's government with the rebel group of young military men known as the Tenentes, who had organized two revolts against the government during the 1920s.
Vargas ran as opposition candidate for president of Brazil in 1930, and when he took a leave of absence from the governorship during the campaign, Aranha served as acting governor. After Vargas lost to the government of Washington Luiz, Aranha joined with the Tenentes in urging Vargas to go along with efforts to organize a revolt. Once Vargas had agreed, the rebels succeeded within 3 weeks in overrunning Brazil's northeast and Amazonian areas, as well as the three southernmost states. Thereupon army leaders in Rio de Janeiro overthrew President Luiz. Aranha was then sent to Rio by the rebel high command to negotiate with the military leaders the transfer of power to Vargas.
Minister and Diplomat
With the installation of President Vargas, Aranha became minister of justice, a post he held until his transfer to the Ministry of Finance in December 1931. In 1934 President Vargas named Aranha ambassador to Washington, D.C. There he worked out a program for resumption of
payment on Brazil's foreign debt, which had been in default for 4 years. When President Vargas led a coup d'etat to establish a semifascist regime in November 1937, Aranha resigned his Washington post in protest. However, in March 1938 Vargas convinced him to enter the government once again, this time as minister of foreign affairs. He continued in this post until 1944.
Aranha was a major force working for alignment of Brazil with the Allies in World War II. Once Brazil had entered the war on the Allied side in 1942, Aranha sought to stimulate popular support for Brazilian participation. To this end, he became vice president of the Society of the Friends of America. When the police refused to allow the society to function, Aranha resigned from the government in August 1944.
At this point Aranha broke with Vargas and became one of the organizers of the antigovernment party, the Uniao Democratica Nacional (UDN). The pressure of the UDN helped force Vargas to call elections for December 1945, but Vargas was overthrown before that date.
During the administration of Vargas's successor, President Eurico Dutra, Aranha returned to diplomacy. He served as ambassador to the United Nations, and in 1947-1948 was president of the UN General Assembly.
With the return of Vargas to the presidency at the end of 1950, peace was made between Vargas and Aranha. Aranha was named minister of finance in 1953, and it was reported that he though this a step toward his candidacy for president. However, President Vargas committed suicide in August 1954, and Aranha immediately resigned from the Cabinet. Aranha did not return to public office but held the status of an "elder statesman" until his death on Jan. 27, 1960.
Further Reading
There is no biography of Aranha in English. Background works that contain information on him include José Maria Bello, A History of Modern Brazil, 1889-1964 (1940; trans. 1959); Austin F. MacDonald, Latin American Politics and Government (1949); and Bryce Wood, The United States and Latin American Wars, 1932-1942 (1966).
Additional Sources
Cohen, Esther., Oswaldo Aranha, Porto Alegre, RS: Tchae!, 1985.
Flores, Moacyr., Osvaldo Aranha, Porto Alegre: IEL, 1991. □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Christopher Lasch and the possibilities of chastened liberalism.
Magazine article from: Polity; 4/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...as a mark of respect. --Christopher Lasch (1) Christopher Lasch stands as one of the most...term, an examination of how Christopher Lasch related to the variegated...twentieth century. As interest in Lasch's work has grown since his...
|
|
On Christopher Lasch.(RECONSIDERATION)(Biography)
Magazine article from: Modern Age; 9/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...TAKEN a more typical course, Christopher Lasch would still be with us. Only...Pittsford, New York, home, Lasch died while still in his intellectual...Zora's first child, Robert Christopher Lasch, was born on June 1, 1932...
|
|
Tradition's champion: historian Christopher Lasch has no truck with the notion of progress. (includes related article on philosophers through history who have been proponents and critics of the idea of progress)
Magazine article from: U.S. News & World Report; 2/18/1991; ; 700+ words
; Christopher Lasch is a historian with a knack for capturing...makings of an angst-ridden decade, Lasch may again have anticipated the tenor of...high. But today it is hard to laugh off Lasch's warning that a bountiful future for...
|
|
Limits and Hope: Christopher Lasch and Political Theory.
Magazine article from: Social Research; 6/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; "Limits and hope," wrote Christopher Lasch, "these words sum up the lines...have tried to weave together." Lasch insisted that much of what makes...I want to take up the challenge Lasch's work presents to political philosophy...
|
|
CHRISTOPHER LASCH, RADICAL ORTHODOXY & THE MODERN COLLAPSE OF THE SELF
Magazine article from: New Oxford Review; 11/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; Ed. Note: Christopher Lasch, R.I.P., is a Contributing Editor...this group is historian Christopher Lasch, whose series of books discussing American...Orthodoxy" by some, extends and enriches Lasch's work Christopher Lasch had, perhaps...
|
|
Late Renowned Cultural Historian Christopher Lasch's 'Plain Style: A Guide to Written English' Busts Politics and Pretensions in Writing.
News Wire article from: Ascribe Higher Education News Service; 8/12/2002; 700+ words
; ...Newswire) -- Cultural historian Christopher Lasch despaired of the self-absorbed...eight years after his death, Lasch's "Plain Style: A Guide to Written...s "The Elements of Style" and Lasch's own "The New Radicalism in...
|
|
Christopher Lasch and the limits of hope.
Magazine article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life; 12/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; Christopher Lasch's untimely death in 1994 deprived America...Impossible to pigeonhole politically, Lasch seemed to be simultaneously to the left...Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy, Lasch elaborated on the distinction between...
|
|
The elite don't mix with the masses. (Christopher Lasch's book 'The Revolt of the Elite and the End of Democracy')
Magazine article from: Insight on the News; 3/6/1995; ; 700+ words
; Christopher Lasch, best known for his book The Culture...as he put it in the acknowledgments, Lasch's final take on American society carries...Betrayal of Democracy (Norton, 276 pp), Lasch struggles with the inevitable dilemma...
|
|
Obituary: Christopher Lasch
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 2/19/1994; ; 700+ words
; Christopher Lasch, historian: born Omaha, Nebraska 1...New York 14 February 1994. CHRISTOPHER LASCH was a cultural historian who moved from...of age in the Eisenhower years. One of Lasch's few interventions in public life...
|
|
Christopher Lasch, R I P. (historian, author, social commentator) (Editorial)
Magazine article from: National Review; 3/21/1994; 700+ words
; ...those advising him on the speech was Christopher Lasch, professor of history and diagnostician...who died last month at 61. Mr. Lasch's early works described, from...fall, we shall miss Christopher Lasch's often incisive, sometimes prophetic...
|
|
Christopher Lasch
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Christopher Lasch Christopher Lasch (1932-1994) was a prominent American historian and social critic...ills of society. Born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1932, Christopher Lasch received his undergraduate degree at Harvard and his graduate degrees...
|
|
Lasch, Christopher
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
Lasch, Christopher (1932–94) An American social...Minimal Self , 1984 ). In his later years Lasch launched a defence of American populism...x2019;. As a result, according to Lasch, cities decay, minorities are marginalized...
|
|
Postmodernism
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...structures dissolved, Toffler believed. Christopher Lasch, in The Culture of Narcissism...political crisis of capitalism," Lasch recounted the emergence of a "therapeutic...psychic well-being. According to Lasch, Americans knew only the overwhelming...
|
|
narcissism
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
...by the American social historian Christopher Lasch ( The Culture of Narcissism , 1980...social analysis and criticism. Lasch, who is unusual on the political...to a lack of ego-development. Lasch sees a number of cultural phenomena...
|
|
War Crimes Trials
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...York: Oxford University Press, 2001. Persico, Joseph. Nuremberg: Infamy on Trial. New York: Viking, 1994. Christopher Lasch / a. g. See also Cold War ; Extradition ; Genocide ; Germany, Relations with ; Helsinki Accords ; International...
|