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Casual conversations occur with great frequency in every human society, but few countries label them as colorfully as Brazil: bate papo. Literally translated, bate papo means to smack a bird’s neck pouch back and forth. Brazilians invoke the term with an anticipatory and almost celebratory undertone; a bate papo with friends and family feeds the Brazilian soul. As the great thinker Sérgio Buarque de Holanda noted, “a horror of social distance seems to be … the most specific trait of the Brazilian spirit.”1Close
When it comes to politics, a bate papo is a common way for Brazilians to process and learn about their complex (and, to most, disappointing) political system and the actors who compose that system. A 2018 survey showed that conversation with family, friends, and colleagues was the most important political information source for Brazilians when they decided how to vote.2Close More anecdotally, one is struck, while walking and eavesdropping on the streets of major Brazilian cities during election campaigns, by the sheer number of conversations about politics.
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