ABSTRACT

Getulio Vargas' dictatorship (1937-1945) attributed to sports a key role to foment the formation of a 'new Brazil', using football as a crucial element to promote the state nationalist policy. A propitious moment for this attempt would be an international event, a space in which Brazil could demonstrate to the civilized nations - especially to the European countries - the best qualities of'the Brazilian race'. This arena was the 1938 World Cup, played in France. This essay presents some aspects of the relationship between football and the construction of Brazil's national identity in the early twentieth century. My focus on the 1938 World Cup is due to the fact this was a quintessential event not only for the history of Brazilian sports but also for the debates on scientific racism and the construction of national identity. This event shaped, more than eight decades ago, the ways through which football articulated the core commonality of the Brazilian society, becoming one of the key elements to understand contemporary Brazil.