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BRAZIL
Brazilians often say they live in a continent
rather than a country, and that's an excusable
exaggeration. The landmass is bigger than the
United States if you exclude Alaska. Brazil has
no mountains to compare with its Andean neighbours,
but in every other respect it has all the scenic
– and cultural – variety you would expect from
so vast a country.
Despite the immense expanses of the interior,
roughly two-thirds of Brazil's population live
on or near the coast; and well over half live
in cities – even in the Amazon. In Rio and São
Paulo, Brazil has two of the world's great metropolises,
and nine other cities have over a million inhabitants.
Yet Brazil still thinks of itself as a frontier
country, and certainly the deeper into the interior
you go, the thinner the population becomes
Brazilians are one of the most ethnically diverse
peoples in the world: in the extreme south, German
and Italian immigration has left distinctive European
features; São Paulo has the world's largest Japanese
community outside Japan; there's a large black
population concentrated in Rio and Salvador; while
the Indian influence is most visible in the people
of Amazônia and the Northeastern interior.
Brazil is a land of profound economic contradictions.
Rapid postwar industrialization made Brazil one
of the world's ten largest economies and put it
among the most developed of Third World countries.
But this has not improved the lot of the vast
majority of Brazilians. The cities are dotted
with favelas, shantytowns that crowd the skyscrapers,
and the contrast between rich and poor is one
of the most glaring anywhere.
Brazil has enormous natural resources but their
exploitation so far has benefited just a few.
The IMF and the greed of First World banks must
bear some of the blame for this situation, but
institutionalized corruption and the reluctance
of the country's large middle class to do anything
that might jeopardize its comfortable lifestyle
are also part of the problem. These difficulties,
however, rarely seem to overshadow everyday life
in Brazil.
Nowhere in the world do people know how to enjoy
themselves more – most famously in the annual
orgiastic celebrations of Carnaval, but reflected,
too, in the lively year-round nightlife that you'll
find in any decent-sized town. This national hedonism
also manifests itself in Brazil's highly developed
beach culture, the country's superb music and
dancing, rich regional cuisines, and in the most
relaxed and tolerant attitude to sexuality – gay
and straight – that you'll find anywhere in South
America.
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