Tesis
Luz no Candeeiro : vínculos de pertencimento em torno do memorial de uma chacina no Centro Histórico de Cuiabá
Fecha
2019-07-08Registro en:
SILGUEIRO, Gabriela Rangel. Luz no Candeeiro: vínculos de pertencimento em torno do memorial de uma chacina no Centro Histórico de Cuiabá. 2019. 127 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Antropologia Social) - Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Instituto de Ciências Humanas e Sociais, Cuiabá, 2019.
Autor
Osório, Patrícia Silva
http://lattes.cnpq.br/1401118064814289
Osório, Patrícia Silva
052.885.672-84
http://lattes.cnpq.br/1401118064814289
Macedo, Clark Mangabeira
097.949.777-99
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5736181360637730
052.885.627-84
Tamaso, Izabela Maria
083.326.258-07
.http://lattes.cnpq.br/3452984712174788
Institución
Resumen
This dissertation presents the materialization of the Memorial to the Luminaire Alley
Slaughter and some attributions of meaning to it. The triple murder killed three underaged, 13
to 16-year-old, in Cuiabá in 1998. Ethnography allowed the identification of how people who
live in street situation appropriated the cultural asset, in the condition of survivors, while
holding a collective memory built by children who were victims of violence and are linked to
the Memorial by this factor. Historical documents (newspapers and digital media) together with
the ethnography allowed the identification of the context of the Memorial installation and the
forces related to its design and installation. The sculpture was made by a group of human rights
activists who met in the 1980s and 1990s at the St. Benedict Church, a church erected by a
black brotherhood. From this Memorial, I describe the bonds of belonging of the street
population related to the narrative and places to which meanings have been attributed along the
twenty years of the Memorial’s existence. The work also addresses the representations of the
city administration and of the National Institute of Historical and Artistic Heritage (IPHAN)
about the Memorial. The observation of the different representations allowed the identification
of the contrasts between the meanings attributed to the Memorial by its holders, by the city
administration and by IPHAN. The spaces to which the survivors attribute meanings are also
contrasted with the meanings attributed by their neighbors. Finally, the historical presence of
black people is presented as the background where meaning conflicts are currently unfolding.