masterThesis
Paisagens festivas de um Ceará negro
Fecha
2019-02-22Registro en:
RAFAEL, Francisco Levy Freitas. Paisagens festivas de um Ceará negro. 2019. 84f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Geografia) - Centro de Ciências Humanas, Letras e Artes, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2019.
Autor
Rafael, Francisco Levy Freitas
Resumen
Known as "Land of Light" because of your exemplary process of premature abolition,
the state of Ceará, just as the whole Brazil, has a gap and a gigantic debt with brazilian
blacks and africans that arrived enslaved here. Besides the admission of black people
at the public universities, is necessary the research incentive into that population, in
their existence and resistance methods during the years, essentially from their cultural
aspects. This work aim was about cultural landscapes, especially black festivities
landscapes, in the state of Ceará, dealing with festivals of distinct locations and dates.
These festivities happened mainly in Fortaleza during the last decades of the XIX
Century and in two rural black communities - Dança de São Gonçalo at Sítio Veiga,
Quixadá, and Festa de Nossa Senhora de Nazaré, at Nazaré, Itapipoca. After
centuries of work and officially reaching freedom from a law without rights warranties,
the black population in Brazil saw herself excluded and underestimated for a long time.
These denial processes and institutionalized extermination, which exists until today,
had origin at some movements that happened mostly among the end of the XIX
Century and first decades of the XX Century, since cultural modernists movements
from Europe as model even the implemented racial public politics starting from multiple
ways in national territory. Built as an autobiogeography, this work, is like an counscious
encounter with a black culture reinvented and alive, also being a calling for reflections
and actions by ethnic-racial relations, the right to look, the landscape, the
image, memory and consequently a becoming. Elaborated by written and visual
narratives is also an attempt to open up new ways of doing Geography, using known
tools, subversively as so many blacks did before, making possible my existence and
the existence of this work.