Anita Leocádia Prestes

Anita Leocádia Benário Prestes (born 27 November 1936 in Berlin) is a Brazilian/German historian. She is the daughter of political activists Olga Benário Prestes and Luís Carlos Prestes.

Anita Prestes
Anita in 1957
Born
Anita Leocádia Benário Prestes

(1936-11-27) 27 November 1936
NationalityBrazilian, German
EducationUniversity of Brazil (BS)
Moscow Social Sciences Institute (M.Ec, M.Phil)
Fluminense Federal University (Sc.D)
AwardsCasa de las Américas Prize (Cuba)
Scientific career
FieldsHistory
InstitutionsFederal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
ThesisA Coluna Prestes (1990)
Academic advisorsMaria Yedda Linhares
Anita Leocádia Prestes

She was born in Barnimstraße Women's Prison in Berlin and was handed over to the care of her paternal grandmother, Leocádia Prestes, at age 14 months. Her mother Olga was sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp and from there to a former psychiatric hospital in Bernburg in 1942, where she was gassed.

In 1964, Prestes achieved a degree in Chemistry from the then "University of Brazil", now known as the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Two years later she gained a Masters in Organic Chemistry.

Life in the USSR

At the beginning of the 1970s, Prestes moved into exile in the USSR. In August 1972, she was indicted in Brazil for political activities, with the Conselho Permanente de Justiça para o Exército (the Army supreme court) sentencing her in absentia to 4 years and 6 months in prison.

In December 1975 Prestes earned a Doctorate in Political Economics from the Institute of Social Science in Moscow and four years later in September 1979, the Brazilian courts reduced Prestes's sentence by four years as part of a wider amnesty.

Return to Brazil

In 1989 Prestes received a Doctorate in History from the Fluminense Federal University, Rio de Janeiro, with a thesis named A Coluna Prestes (The Prestes Column), which was the movement commanded by her father of almost 1500 men fighting against the presidency of Artur Bernardes.[1] She is now a retired Associate Professor of Brazilian History, but she continues teaching on the Master's and Doctorate's Compared History Program at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ).

Books

  • Prestes, Anita Leocádia (1994). Os militares e a reação republicana: as origens do tenentismo [The militaries and the republican reaction: the origins of tenentismo]. Vozes.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (1995). Uma epopéia brasileira: a Coluna Prestes [A Brazilian epic: the Prestes Column]. Editora Moderna.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (1999). Tenentismo pós-30: continuidade o ruptura? [Tenentismo post-1930: continuity or rupture?]. Paz e Terra.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (2001). Da inssureição armada, 1935 à união nacional, 1938-1945: a virada tática na política do PCB [From the armed insurgence, 1935 to the national union, 1938-1945: the tactical turnaround in PCB's politics]. Paz e Terra.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (2006). Luiz Carlos Prestes: patriota, revolucionário, comunista [Luiz Carlos Prestes: patriot, revolutionary, communist]. Editora Expressão Popular.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (2008). Luiz Carlos Prestes e a Aliança Nacional Libertadora: os caminhos da luta antifascista no Brasil, 1934/35 [Luiz Carlos Prestes and the Liberating National Alliance: the paths of the anti-fascist fight in Brazil, 1934/35]. Editora Brasiliense.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio; Prestes, Luiz Carlos; Prestes, Lygia (2001). Anos tormentosos [Stormy Years]. Arquivo Público do Estado do Rio de Janeiro.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (2010). Os comunistas brasileiros (1945-1956/58): Luiz Carlos Prestes e a política do PCB [The Brazilian Communists (1945-1956/58): Luiz Carlos Prestes and the PCB's politics]. Editora Brasiliense.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (1997). A Coluna Prestes [The Prestes Column]. Paz e Terra.
  • Prestes, Anita Leocádio (2017). Luiz Carlos Prestes: um comunista brasileiro [Luiz Carlos Prestes: a Brazilian Communist]. Boitempo Editorial.
gollark: You'll all see.
gollark: You'll see, oh yes.
gollark: Keanu, look.
gollark: Maybe I can livestream a mini-potatoplex to it.
gollark: Billboards are fun.

References

  1. "Brazil Prestes Column 1924-1927". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2008-08-26.


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