Dissertação
O consumo de mídia por agricultores familiares e as mediações de classe social e economia solidária
Fecha
2021-04-08Autor
Rebellato, Mauricio
Institución
Resumen
This work is an ethnography study about media consumption by family agriculture of Santa
Maria/RS, participants in the Project Esperança/Cooesperança and who are organized through
the social movement of the Solidary Economy. This research is guided by the mediation of
social class, understood as a key to understanding the relationships between the construction of
class identity, the socio-cultural context and the consumption of the media. The main objective
is to understand the role of media consumption, mediated by the solidary economy and by the
social class, in the formation of the family agriculture class identity. We sought, during the two
years of research, to answer the following research problem: How does media consumption,
mediated by the social movement of the solidary economy, modulate the construction of the
class identity of family agriculture’ families? For this, we base research on British and Latin
American Cultural Studies, through the concept of social class (BOURDIEU, 1984) and the
Theory of Mediations (MARTÍN-BARBERO, 2003) based on sociality and rituality. We used
the method of critical ethnography reception (RONSINI, 2011), and other techniques based on
a multimethodological combination (BONIN, 2014). The results of this research show that the
mediations of sociality and rituality are also fundamental to the understanding of the results,
with the social class and the solidary economy determining the practices and the way of life of
family agriculture. Participation in the solidary economy movement, in turn, mould family life
and affects the economic and cultural capital of farmers. The presence of media cultural capital
(RONSINI, 2012) is revealed due to the increasing incorporation of means of communication
for use in field work. Finally, we emphasize that the identity of family agriculture is built, on
the one hand, in continuity and rupture with the peasant identity; on the other hand, as a means
of cultural and social valorization, with a minimum counterpart of economic valorization.