Hi, I'm Marie.
I'm a french Canadian.
I'm new on Wikipedia and I'm doing currently the Wikipedia:School of Open course, Writing Wikipedia Articles (#WIKISOO).
Bonjour!
Je m'appelle Marie, je suis Canadienne française.
Je suis nouvelle sur Wikipedia et je suis présentement le cours libre de l'école de Wikipedia, Writing Wikipedia Articles (#WIKISOO). w:fr:Utilisateur:Marie-Pierre St-Louis
Censorship under the military dictatorship in Brazil consisted of restrictions on the media, artists, journalists, and others which the government deemed "subversive", "dangerous" or "immoral". The political system of the
Brazilian military dictatorship, installed by a
1964 coup d'état and which persisted until 1985, also set out to censor material that went against what it called "morality and good manners". The
constitution of 1967 established censorship as an official, centralized activity of the Brazilian federal government. There were several protests against the practice, including the Cultura contra Censura protest in February 1968, depicted in this photograph, which shows the actresses
Tônia Carrero,
Eva Wilma,
Odete Lara,
Norma Bengell and
Cacilda Becker.Photograph credit: unknown; restored by
Adam Cuerden
Hi, I'm Marie.
I'm a french Canadian.
I'm new on Wikipedia and I'm doing currently the Wikipedia:School of Open course, Writing Wikipedia Articles (#WIKISOO).
Bonjour!
Je m'appelle Marie, je suis Canadienne française.
Je suis nouvelle sur Wikipedia et je suis présentement le cours libre de l'école de Wikipedia, Writing Wikipedia Articles (#WIKISOO). w:fr:Utilisateur:Marie-Pierre St-Louis
Censorship under the military dictatorship in Brazil consisted of restrictions on the media, artists, journalists, and others which the government deemed "subversive", "dangerous" or "immoral". The political system of the
Brazilian military dictatorship, installed by a
1964 coup d'état and which persisted until 1985, also set out to censor material that went against what it called "morality and good manners". The
constitution of 1967 established censorship as an official, centralized activity of the Brazilian federal government. There were several protests against the practice, including the Cultura contra Censura protest in February 1968, depicted in this photograph, which shows the actresses
Tônia Carrero,
Eva Wilma,
Odete Lara,
Norma Bengell and
Cacilda Becker.Photograph credit: unknown; restored by
Adam Cuerden