Federico Brito Figueroa
Federico Britto Figueroa was a Venezuelan Marxist historian and anthropologist. Brito's ideas and writings played an important role in the ideological formation of Hugo Chavez, former president of Venezuela.
Born in La Victoria in Venezuela, Brito was a member of Venezuela's National Democratic Party in 1936. Britto, after profound schisms appeared in the Venezuelan left, joined the Venezuelan Communist Party, together with Domingo Maza Zavala and Luis Miquilena.
In 1946, Britto entered the Instituto Pedagógico Nacional to obtain the title of professor of social sciences. Britto later travelled to México. There, he studied in the Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Along with Wenceslao Roces and François Chavalier, Brito graduated with a degree in ethnology and anthropology. Britto returned to Venezuela in 1959, after Marcos Pérez Jiménez's toppling, and began studies at the Universidad Central de Venezuela and was licensed as a historian and obtained his doctorate in anthropology. Britto's doctoral thesis was the renowned and influential work La estructura económica de Venezuela colonial, which he wrote in 1963 and published in 1978.
Key points of his works included the elucidation of slavery, the study of Venezuelan "Federal War" general Ezequiel Zamora, and a critical and probing analysis of the socioeconomic underpinnings of both colonialism and neocolonialism..Works
- Ezequiel Zamora. Un capitulo de la historia nacional, Caracas, 1951
- Liberacion de los esclavos, Caracas, 1951
- Venezuela, siglo XX, 1967
- La estructura económica de Venezuela colonial, Caracas, 1978
- Tiempo de Ezequiel Zamora, Caracas, 1981
- El problema tierra y esclavos en la historia de Venezuela, Caracas, 1982
- Historia económica y social de Venezuela: Una estructura para su estudio'', Caracas, 1979/1987