ABSTRACT
In dialogue with some critical perspectives from the human sciences – notably, economic theory, social history, political science, and sociology of culture – this work aligns with a review of old dichotomies and dualisms, incapable of keeping up with contemporary intercultural relations. Taking countries such as Brazil and China as main references, it points to other possibilities for examining what is conventionally called “unequal and combined” in current cultural landscapes, amid planetary socio-environmental crises.
Keywords:
Cultural landscapes; Brazil – Latin America – China: Approaches; Spacetimes: inequalities; Spacetimes: simultaneities; Spacetimes: combinations