A investigação as leva a uma convenção de tecnologia em Brasília, onde elas descobrem que o "preferência nacional" esconde um esquema de lavagem de dinheiro e tráfico de informações entre políticos e uma milícia digital. O grande diferencial deste volume é o tom de thriller conspiratório pós-moderno. Magalhães abandona os clichês de "vilão com capa e bigode" para apresentar antagonistas que são empresários falsamente progressistas e youtubers patriotários.
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A critical or analytical look at this specific volume would typically cover: A investigação as leva a uma convenção de
| # | Title / Artist | Form | Synopsis & Why It Matters | |---|---|---|---| | | Bandeira de Papel – Miriam Miller | 8‑page graphic essay | Traces the evolution of the Brazilian flag in protest posters from 1964 to 2023, using cut‑paper collage. Highlights how a state symbol becomes a tool for dissent. | | 2 | Café da Manhã – Kléber Almeida | 12‑page autobiographical comic | A day in the life of a São Paulo barista who refuses to serve “imported” coffee beans. A witty commentary on consumer nationalism and labor precarity. | | 3 | África em São Paulo – Ana Luiza Fialho | Mixed‑media spread | Combines archival photos of Angolan migrants (1970s) with contemporary selfies, overlayed with a map of the “African Belt”. Explores the hidden Afro‑Brazilian diaspora. | | 4 | Cota de Leitura – Mauro Moraes | Data‑visualization comic | A bar‑graph styled narrative showing how Brazilian school curricula allocate reading time to national versus foreign authors. The stark disparity is both humorous and unsettling. | | 5 | Ode à Tarifa – Carla Silva (poet) | Illustrated poem | A lyrical piece about the “tariff” on love—how we price emotions through cultural expectations. The typography shifts between Portuguese and English, emphasizing linguistic preference. | | 6 | Silêncio de Baterias – Fab Magalhães | 10‑page sci‑fi vignette | In a future Brazil, all devices are forced to use locally‑made batteries, sparking a black‑market revolution. An allegory for protectionist policies versus open innovation. | | 7 | Cartões de Visita – Vanessa Rossi | Design‑driven pamphlet | A collection of 15 fictitious business cards for “national” enterprises (e.g., “Café Nacional – 100 % Brazilian Beans”). The stark, minimalist layout critiques branding that masks exclusion. | 5/5 A critical or analytical look at this
Edited and curated by Fab Magalhães & Vanessa Rossi A witty commentary on consumer nationalism and labor