The question that I address in this article is the following: how does one engage in contemporary theoretical debates departing from studies of the so-called Brazilian social thought? In order to answer this question, I argue that it is necessary to articulate Brazilian social thought scholarship to current debates which criticize eurocentrism and sustain the need for alternative discourses from the Global South as well. I also argue that it is important to put the history of Brazilian social thought into the wider context of a transnational history of the peripheral thought. I analyze Brazilian sociologist Guerreiro Ramos as a case-study in order to expand on this thread.
Brazilian social thought; social theory; Global South; Guerreiro Ramos