Tesis
À sombra do sucesso: dinâmica social numa colônia alemã no sul do Brasil (Colônia do Pinhal - Itaara/RS, 1857-1894)
Fecha
2018-08-03Autor
Avello, Adriano Sequeira
Institución
Resumen
The present research aims to understand the process of german colonization of the Pinhal
Colony, a particular private colony, in the province of Rio Grande do Sul in the 19th century, the
current county of Itaara, RS. The research period begins in 1857, alludes to the foundation, and
ends in 1894 when the railway line arrives in the locality by changing the landscape and the
population's objectives. The objective is to discuss a different perspective of economic
development of the agricultural colonies within the framework of german colonization, since the
german colonies are always regarded as prosperous economically otherwise they are reduced to
failure. Thus, colonies and immigrants who do not fit this pattern are marginalized by the ethnic
group. The research focuses on the Pinhal region, from the construction of the road to attempts
of colonization agent in colony promotion. As well as investigating the first spontaneous
settlements in the region, emphasizing the peasant model of colonization in forest areas.
Analyzing the form of land clearing, family labor, agrarian and land issues involving the Land’s
Law of 1850. Without losing sight of the initial agricultural production as a decisive aspect for the
development of private german colonies which did not receive an incentive from the State to
consolidate. In this sense, the structure that permeates the study is the concept of peasant family
as an organizational form of space in which there is no external management, as a colony director.
Linked to the peasant situation the emphasis on the approximation and distancing of families in
subsistence mode in the small farm with the family or slave labor. And, in short, to what extent
they articulated the permanence or exit of the peasant situation were the ways of interpreting the
experiences in a German colony in the forests of southern Brazil where constant internal migration
functions as the social dynamics of families always in search of the best lands for the crops.