• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 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

Caminhos, mudan?as, alian?as e resist?ncias ind?genas: identidade e territorialidade dos ?ndios da Aldeia de Itagua? ? S?culo XIX. / Paths, changes, alliances and indigenous resistance: identity and territoriality of Indians of Village Itagua? ? XIX Century

FERREIRA, Ana Cl?udia de Souza 14 October 2016 (has links)
Submitted by Jorge Silva (jorgelmsilva@ufrrj.br) on 2017-10-17T17:54:20Z No. of bitstreams: 1 2016 - Ana Cl?udia de Souza Ferreira.pdf: 2041801 bytes, checksum: e1c4a4ab36b4729f831af2c9601d8d7e (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-10-17T17:54:20Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 2016 - Ana Cl?udia de Souza Ferreira.pdf: 2041801 bytes, checksum: e1c4a4ab36b4729f831af2c9601d8d7e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-10-14 / FAPERJ / This work aims to contribute to understanding the history of the Village of S?o Francisco of Itagua? in the nineteenth century. Firstly, it is proposed to discuss and consider supposed process of extinction of Itagua? village which has been defended by the discourse of certain political and intellectual authorities, who argued about the "mixing" and "degradation" of indigenous groups. Also intends to show that this speech intensified the expropriation of indigenous lands and the speech been deconstructing their right to land. Thus, in accordance of that discourse the Indians were treated as if there they did not exist, producing a type discursive of "invisibility" and / or "disappearance". In Itagua?, the settlement went through successive attempts to extinction, while the Indigenous continued resisting and building different ways of staying with their lands, even after Itagua? change to the village in 1818, or of the declaration of extintion of Itagua? Village in 1834. Despite the political and social environment less and less favorable to the Indians, sources such as correspondence, requirements, offices, ordinances, floor plan chorography and population map of the village indicate that, although the village has been declared extinct by local authorities, the Indians recognized their territory as "Village", at the same time they were recognized by other (local) residents as "Indigenous of settlement" in the region. Still in 1860, as were demonstrated in this study, the Indigenous continuous having land in the region and building a sociocultural and political space, which interacted with the local society and made choices, negotiations and resisted the territorial expropriation proceedings. (Lastly), with this study, we seek to deconstruct the idea that the Indians disappeared from the (so-called village?s extinction in the year of 1834) supposed extinction of the village 1834, making them "visible" through research in historical sources still little visited by the history of the Indians, as the baptism records as well as and death inventories. We also searched the parish registers of land. / Este trabalho pretende contribuir para a compreens?o da hist?ria do Aldeia de S?o Francisco de Itagua? no s?culo XIX. Prop?e-se a discutir e problematizar o suposto processo de extin??o da Aldeia de Itagua? defendido pelo discurso de determinadas autoridades pol?ticas e intelectuais, que argumentavam acerca da ?mistura? e ?degrada??o? dos grupos ind?genas. Pretende tamb?m demonstrar que este discurso intensificava a expropria??o das terras ind?genas e desconstru?a o direito deles ?s mesmas. Dessa forma, os ?ndios passaram a ser tratados como se n?o existissem, intensificando um vi?s discursivo da ?invisibilidade? e/ou do ?desaparecimento?. Em Itagua?, o aldeamento passou por sucessivas tentativas de extin??o, ao mesmo tempo que os ?ndios continuaram resistindo e construindo diferentes modos de permanecer com suas terras, mesmo depois da eleva??o de Itagua? ? Vila, em 1818, ou da declara??o de extin??o da Aldeia de Itagua?, em 1834. Apesar do quadro pol?tico e social cada vez menos favor?vel aos ?ndios, fontes como correspond?ncias, requerimentos, of?cios, portarias, planta corogr?fica e mapa populacional da aldeia indicam que, embora o aldeamento tenha sido declarado extinto por autoridades locais, os ?ndios reconheciam seu territ?rio como ?Aldeia?, ao mesmo tempo em que eram reconhecidos por outros moradores como ?ndios aldeados na regi?o. Ainda na d?cada de 1850 e 1860, como demonstramos neste estudo, os ?ndios continuavam possuindo terras na regi?o e construindo um espa?o sociocultural e pol?tico, onde interagiam com a sociedade local e faziam escolhas, negocia??es e resistiam aos processos de expropria??o territorial. Com este estudo, procuramos desconstruir a ideia de que os ?ndios desapareceram, a partir da suposta extin??o do aldeamento de 1834, tornando-os ?vis?veis? por meio da pesquisa em fontes hist?ricas ainda pouco visitadas pela hist?ria dos ?ndios no que se refere ao Rio de Janeiro, como os registros de batismo, de ?bito e invent?rios. Tamb?m pesquisamos os registros paroquiais de terras.

Page generated in 0.136 seconds