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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

\'Vai graxa ou samba, senhor?\': a música dos engraxantes paulistanos entre 1920 e 1950 / The music of the shoeshine boys of São Paulo between 1920 and 1950.

Santos, André Augusto de Oliveira 18 August 2015 (has links)
Por meio da intertextualidade e da narrativa, esta dissertação aborda a relação dos pequenos engraxates ambulantes com a música produzida nas ruas da cidade de São Paulo, durante a primeira metade do século XX. As rodas de batucada organizadas informalmente por estes pequenos trabalhadores nas esquinas, praças e largos, nos momentos de intervalo entre um cliente e outro, eram muitos comuns na paisagem urbana do período. A prática contribuiu na formação de uma geração de sambistas paulistas e na consolidação do samba em São Paulo. Sujeitos ecléticos que se relacionavam com os mais diferentes estratos sociais, os lustradores de sapatos ocupavam as ruas paulistanas desde meados do século XIX e criaram, ao longo do tempo, uma forte imbricação com a cultura musical da cidade. Durante a década de 1940, alguns eram compositores e criticavam, em sambas, a repressão a qual estavam submetidos pelas autoridades, já que era proibido exercer o ofício nas ruas. Outros, se sobressaíram como batuqueiros e, quando adultos, destacaram-se como lideranças das principais escolas de samba de São Paulo. As fontes documentais empregadas na pesquisa são de origem policial, processual, crônicas, reportagens e depoimentos. / By means of a narrative, this current thesis approaches the relations between shoeshine boys and the music produced on the streets of São Paulo during the 1930s and 1940s. The batucada jams, informally organized by those young workers in any corner, square or plaza of the city, during quick breaks in the midst of their labor, were very common in the urban landscape at that time. This custom contributed to the formation of a whole generation of samba musicians that had established the samba music scene in the city of São Paulo. All those young boot polishers were very eclectic fellows, always willing to keep in touch with people from all social classes, by occupying the streets of São Paulo since the middle of the 19th century and then creating a strong relation with the music culture of the city throughout the times. During the 1940s a few of them became music writers well-known for criticizing, through their samba songs, the steady repression they suffered from the police due to their status of illegal workers. Other shoeshine boys became batuqueiros (street drummers) that later would be responsible for leading the most traditional samba schools in São Paulo. The main documentary sources used in the present study were records from police departments, criminal prosecutions, written chronicles, news reporting and oral history.
2

Os Guardiões da memória na Praça D. Pedro II / The guardiões of the memory in square D. Pedro II

SOBRAL, Maria Lizete Sampaio January 2006 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2011-03-23T21:19:45Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 / Item created via OAI harvest from source: http://www.bdtd.ufpa.br/tde_oai/oai2.php on 2011-03-23T21:19:45Z (GMT). Item's OAI Record identifier: oai:bdtd.ufpa.br:362 / It addresses the constitution of the memory of shoeshiners who work on the lawns of square Dom Pedro II, in Belém Pará, considering their relations regarding this public space and the meanings assigned to it. Its objective is that of studying the means by which they construct their memory as a phenomenon integrating their lives and read in their life histories, which are the main analytical tool used in the construction of this work. / Aborda a memória constituída pelos engraxates da praça Dom Pedro II, a partir da relação que estes mantêm com este espaço público e dos significados que eles lhes atribuem. Tem por objetivo estudar a construção dessa memória como fenômeno constitutivo da vida desses engraxates flagradas nas suas histórias de vida, ferramenta deste trabalho.
3

\'Vai graxa ou samba, senhor?\': a música dos engraxantes paulistanos entre 1920 e 1950 / The music of the shoeshine boys of São Paulo between 1920 and 1950.

André Augusto de Oliveira Santos 18 August 2015 (has links)
Por meio da intertextualidade e da narrativa, esta dissertação aborda a relação dos pequenos engraxates ambulantes com a música produzida nas ruas da cidade de São Paulo, durante a primeira metade do século XX. As rodas de batucada organizadas informalmente por estes pequenos trabalhadores nas esquinas, praças e largos, nos momentos de intervalo entre um cliente e outro, eram muitos comuns na paisagem urbana do período. A prática contribuiu na formação de uma geração de sambistas paulistas e na consolidação do samba em São Paulo. Sujeitos ecléticos que se relacionavam com os mais diferentes estratos sociais, os lustradores de sapatos ocupavam as ruas paulistanas desde meados do século XIX e criaram, ao longo do tempo, uma forte imbricação com a cultura musical da cidade. Durante a década de 1940, alguns eram compositores e criticavam, em sambas, a repressão a qual estavam submetidos pelas autoridades, já que era proibido exercer o ofício nas ruas. Outros, se sobressaíram como batuqueiros e, quando adultos, destacaram-se como lideranças das principais escolas de samba de São Paulo. As fontes documentais empregadas na pesquisa são de origem policial, processual, crônicas, reportagens e depoimentos. / By means of a narrative, this current thesis approaches the relations between shoeshine boys and the music produced on the streets of São Paulo during the 1930s and 1940s. The batucada jams, informally organized by those young workers in any corner, square or plaza of the city, during quick breaks in the midst of their labor, were very common in the urban landscape at that time. This custom contributed to the formation of a whole generation of samba musicians that had established the samba music scene in the city of São Paulo. All those young boot polishers were very eclectic fellows, always willing to keep in touch with people from all social classes, by occupying the streets of São Paulo since the middle of the 19th century and then creating a strong relation with the music culture of the city throughout the times. During the 1940s a few of them became music writers well-known for criticizing, through their samba songs, the steady repression they suffered from the police due to their status of illegal workers. Other shoeshine boys became batuqueiros (street drummers) that later would be responsible for leading the most traditional samba schools in São Paulo. The main documentary sources used in the present study were records from police departments, criminal prosecutions, written chronicles, news reporting and oral history.

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