6 resultados para Brasilian Amazonia
em Helda - Digital Repository of University of Helsinki
Resumo:
This thesis discusses the contemporary construction of the lived worlds of indigenous Amazonian youths. Today’s native peoples are considerably affected by the processes of globalization and urbanization, which have led to new ways of relating to their cultural traditions. This work presents a case study of Manchineri youngsters aged between 14 and 24 years old living in Acre state in Brazilian Amazonia. The Arawak-speaking Manchineri number some 1,000 people; their legally demarcated reserve is situated next to the River Yaco. The research is based on ethnographic material collected in the Mamoadate reserve and in the state capital, Rio Branco. By comparing the youth in different physical and social environments (the reserve and the city), my attempt has been to search for the most typical elements maintained, altered and created in the current lived worlds of Manchineri youths. Fieldwork methods included interviews, participant observation, photographs, video recordings, and drawings. The material was analyzed within the multidisciplinary framework of the social and cultural construction of knowledge. The study applies the concepts of social field, symbolic capital, and habitus as they have been used by Pierre Bourdieu; perspective as developed recently in Amazonian ethnology; the sacred as a cultural category as understood in the study of religion; and individual and person as concepts central to anthropology and sociology. Additionally, the study can be contextualized within youth studies, Latin American studies, and urban studies. The results of the study show that the everyday lives of young Amazonian native people are formed by a complex mixture of ‘modernity’ and ‘tradition’, fragmentation, and transitions between different conceptual frameworks. Part II discusses the ethnographic material in depth and shows that indigenous adolescents act from a variety of social perspectives: the native youth’s own ethnic group, divided into sub-groups, especially into urban residents and those living in the reserve; ancestors, super-human agents and spirits; other indigenous groups and non-natives. Consequently, besides the traditional initiation ritual, we find various contemporary rites of passage to adulthood: state-education, learning traditional practices, shamanism, matrimony, and transitions between the reserve and urban areas. According to these results, new social roles, political organization, responsibilities, and in general the desire to be respected, require both ‘modern’ and ‘traditional’ abilities. In Part III, the study shows that the current power relations constituted by new social contacts, ethnic recognition, and cooperation with different institutions have resulted in the formation of new social fields: youth cultures, the ethnic group, shamanic practices, the ethnopolitical movement, and indigenous students. The capacity of young Amazonian Indians to act in contemporary social fields produces them as full persons. The study also argues that the elements of the lived worlds can be divided into these social fields. When focusing on these fields, it became evident that these comprise the strategies adopted by young Indians to break through social and cultural barriers.
Resumo:
Accessibility is a crucial factor for interaction between areas in economic, cultural, political and environmental terms. Therefore, information concerning accessibility is relevant for informed decision making, planning and research. The Loreto region in the Peruvian Amazonia provides an interesting scene for an accessibility study. Loreto is sparsely populated and because there are few roads in the region, in practice all movement and transportation happens along the river network. Due to the proximity of the Andes, river dynamics are strong and annual changes in water level combined with these dynamic processes constantly reshape accessibility patterns of the region. Selling non-timber forest products (NTFP) and agricultural products (AP) in regional centres is an important income source for local rain forest dwellers. Thus, accessibility to the centres is crucial for the livelihood of local population. -- In this thesis I studied how accessible the regional centre Iquitos is from other parts of Loreto. In addition, I studied the regional NTFP/AP trade patterns and compared them with patterns of accessibility. Based on GPS-measurements, using GIS, I created a time-distance surface covering Loreto. This surface describes the time-distance to Iquitos, along the river network. Based on interview material, I assessed annual changes to accessibility patterns in the region. The most common regional NTFP/AP were classified according to the amount of time they can be preserved, and based on the accessibility surface, I modelled a catchment area for each of these product classes. -- According to my results, navigation speeds vary considerably in different parts of the river network, depending on river types, vessels, flow direction and season. Navigating downstream is, generally, faster than upstream navigation. Thus, Iquitos is better accessible from areas situated south and south west of the city, like along the rivers Ucayali and Marañon. Differences in accessibility between different seasons are also substantial: during the dry season navigation is slower due to lower water levels and emerging sand bars. Regularly operating boats follow routes only along certain rivers and close to Iquitos transport facilities are more abundant than in more distant areas. Most of the products present in Iquitos market places are agricultural products, and the share of NTFP is significantly smaller. Most of the products were classified in product class 2, and the catchment area for these products is rather small. Many products also belonged to class 5, and the catchment area for these products reaches up to the edges of my study area, following the patterns of the river network. -- The accessibility model created in this study predicts travel times relatively well, although in some cases the modelled time-distances are substantially shorter than observed time-distances. This is partly caused by the fact that real-life navigation routes are more complicated than the modelled routes. Rain forest dwellers having easier access to Iquitos have more opportunities in terms of the products they decide to market. Thus, they can better take advantage of other factors affecting the market potential of different products. -- In all, understanding spatial variation in accessibility is important. In the Amazonian context it is difficult to combine the accessibility-related needs of the local dwellers with conservation purposes and the future challenge lies in finding solution that satisfy both of these needs.
The Mediated Immediacy : João Batista Libanio and the Question of Latin American Liberation Theology
Resumo:
This study is a systematic analysis of mediated immediacy in the production of the Brazilian professor of theology João Batista Libanio. He stresses both ethical mediation and the immediate character of the faith. Libanio has sought an answer to the problem of science and faith. He makes use of the neo-scholastic distinction between matter and form. According to St. Thomas Aquinas, God cannot be known as a scientific object, but it is possible to predicate a formal theological content of other subject matter with the help of revelation. This viewpoint was emphasized in neo-Thomism and supported by the liberation theologians. For them, the material starting point was social science. It becomes a theologizable or revealable (revelabile) reality. This social science has its roots in Latin American Marxism which was influenced by the school of Louis Althusser and considered Marxism a science of history . The synthesis of Thomism and Marxism is a challenge Libanio faced, especially in his Teologia da libertação from 1987. He emphasized the need for a genuinely spiritual and ethical discernment, and was particularly critical of the ethical implications of class struggle. Libanio s thinking has a strong hermeneutic flavor. It is more important to understand than to explain. He does not deny the need for social scientific data, but that they cannot be the exclusive starting point of theology. There are different readings of the world, both scientific and theological. A holistic understanding of the nature of religious experience is needed. Libanio follows the interpretation given by H. C. de Lima Vaz, according to whom the Hegelian dialectic is a rational circulation between the totality and its parts. He also recalls Oscar Cullmann s idea of God s Kingdom that is already and not yet . In other words, there is a continuous mediation of grace into the natural world. This dialectic is reflected in ethics. Faith must be verified in good works. Libanio uses the Thomist fides caritate formata principle and the modern orthopraxis thinking represented by Edward Schillebeeckx. One needs both the ortho of good faith and the praxis of the right action. The mediation of praxis is the mediation of human and divine love. Libanio s theology has strong roots in the Jesuit spirituality that places the emphasis on contemplation in action.
Resumo:
The Politics of Pulp Investment and the Brazilian Landless Movement (MST) The paper industry has been moving more heavily to the global South at the beginning of the 21st century. In a number of cases the rural populations of the global South have engaged in increasingly important resistance in their scuffle with the large-scale tree plantation-relying pulp investment model. The resistance had generally not yet managed to slow down Southern industrial tree plantation expansion until 2004. After all, even the MST, perhaps the strongest of the Southern movements, has limited power in comparison to the corporations pushing for plantation expansion. This thesis shows how, even against these odds, depending on the mechanisms of contention and case-specific conflict dynamics, in some cases the movements have managed to slow and even reverse plantation expansion. The thesis is based on extensive field research in the Brazilian countryside. It outlines a new theory of contentious agency promotion, emphasizing its importance in the shaping of corporate resource exploitation. The thesis includes a Qualitative Comparative Analysis of resistance influence on the economic outcomes of all (14) Brazilian large-scale pulp projects between 2004-2008. The central hypothesis of the thesis is that corporate resource exploitation can be slowed down more effectively and likely when the resistance is based on contentious agency. Contentious agency is created by the concatenation of five mutually supporting mechanisms of contention: organizing and politicizing a social movement; heterodox framing of pulp projects; protesting; networking; and embedding whilst maintaining autonomy. The findings suggest that contentious agency can slow or even reverse the expansion of industrial plantations, whereas when contentious agency promotion was inactive, fast or even unchecked plantation expansion was always the outcome. The rule applied to all the assessed 14 pulp conflict cases. The hypothesis gained strong support even in situations where corporate agency promotion was simultaneously active. In previous studies on social movements, there has been a lack of contributions that help us understand the causal mechanisms of contention influencing economic outcomes. The thesis answers to the call by merging a Polanyian analysis of the political economy with the Dynamics of Contention research program and making a case for the impact of contentious agency on capital accumulation. The research concludes that an efficient social movement can utilize mechanisms of contention to promote the potential of activism among its members and influence investment outcomes. Protesting, for example via pioneering land occupations, seemed to be particularly important. Until now, there has been no comprehensive theory on when and how contentious agency can slow down or reverse the expansion of corporate resource exploitation. The original contribution of this research is to provide such a theory, and utilize it to offer an extensive explanation on the conflicts over pulp investment in Brazil, the globalization of the paper industry, and slowing of industrial plantation expansion in the global South.
Resumo:
Tutkimus käsittelee käännöksiä, joita keskustelijat tuottavat monenkeskisen, kaksikielisen arkikeskustelun aikana toisilleen. Toiset osallistujista ovat kaksikielisiä ja toiset yksikielisiä, ja käännöksiä tuotetaan erityisesti silloin, kun osa puheesta on kielimuurin vuoksi jäänyt yksikielisiltä ymmärtämättä. Käännökset ovat osa kielenvälitystä eli toimintaa, jossa puhuja edesauttaa keskustelukieltä vaihtamalla erikielisten läsnäolijoiden osallistumista keskusteluun tai toimii ei-ammattimaisena tulkkina osapuolten välillä. Keskusteluaineisto on suomen- ja portugalinkielistä. Se on nauhoitettu entisessä suomalaisessa siirtokunnassa Brasilian Penedossa, jossa asuu edelleen noin 20 alkuperäisten siirtolaisten jälkeläistä tai myöhemmin muuttanutta suomenpuhujaa. Tutkimuksessa esitellään lyhyesti Penedoa, sen historiaa ja joitakin penedolaisten puhuman suomen erityispiirteitä, jotka johtuvat kontaktista portugalin kielen kanssa. Työn metodisena ja teoreettisena pohjana ovat pääasiassa keskustelunanalyysi ja vuorovaikutuslingvistiikka, joiden näkökulmasta tarkastellaan käännösten syntaktista muotoutumista meneillään olevan vuorovaikutuksellisen toiminnan tarpeisiin. Puhujat tuottavat käännösten alussa erityisiä syntaktisia rakenteita (lohkorakenne, lohkeama ja topikalisaatio), jotka niin sanotusti lohkaisevat jonkin lausuman elementin sen alkuun. Työn tavoitteena on selvittää, miksi näitä rakenteita esiintyy juuri käännösvuoroissa. Tähän pyritään tarkastelemalla rakenteiden vuorovaikutuksellisia ja syntaktisia ominaisuuksia, jotka mahdollistavat niiden hyödyntämisen kielenvälityksessä. Tyypillisimmin käännösvuoron alkuun lohjennut elementti on edeltävästä puheesta kierrätettävä leksikaalinen substantiivilauseke, joka toimii kiintopisteenä keskustelun eri kielillä tuotettujen osien välillä. Kyseisiä rakenteita on kielitieteellisissä kuvauksissa pidetty usein varsin kiteytyneinä, mutta ne esiintyvät aineistossa hyvin vaihtelevissa muodoissa. Vuorovaikutuslingvistisessä tutkimuksessa onkin käytetty erilaisia lohkeavia rakenteita esimerkkeinä puhehetkessä jäsentyvästä ja sen tarpeisiin muotoutuvasta kieliopista. Työ tuo aihepiiriin lisätietoa, sillä se esittelee lohkeavat rakenteet vuorovaikutuksellisena resurssina uudessa yhteydessä, arkikeskustelun käännöksissä. Rakenteiden esiintyminen kieltä vaihtavissa vuoroissa nostaa huomion kohteeksi sen, miten rakenteissa käytetyt viittausmuodot suhteutuvat edeltävään, erikieliseen keskusteluun. Leksikaalisia substantiivilausekkeita tuottamalla uudet vastaanottajat saatetaan selville puheenaiheesta, ja samalla rakenne, jossa lausekkeet esiintyvät, luo odotuksen vuoron jatkumisesta. Näin syntyy käännös, joka liittyy koherentiksi jatkoksi erikieliselle keskustelulle ja samalla johtaa keskustelua eteenpäin siten, että siihen voi liittyä uusia osallistujia. Meneillään oleva toiminta näkyy kieltä vaihtavien vuorojen muotoilussa: Käännöstä tuottaessaan puhujat orientoituvat ylittämään keskusteluun syntynyttä kielimuuria muun muassa juuri tuottamalla viittaukset leksikaalisina. Kielen vaihtamista hyödyntävä aiemman puheen toisto voi kuitenkin olla myös esimerkiksi koodinvaihtoa, jolla puhuja hakee vastaanottajan palautetta. Silloin kielimuuria ei tarvitse ylittää, ja viittauksia voidaan ongelmitta tuottaa ei-leksikaalisina. Työssä pohditaankin myös varsinaisen kääntämisen suhdetta muuhun eri kielellä tuotetun toiston hyödyntämiseen keskustelussa.
Resumo:
This study approaches the problem of poverty in the hinterlands of Northeast Brazil through the concept of structural violence, linking the environmental threats posed by climate change, especially those related to droughts, to the broader social struggles in the region. When discussions about potentials and rights are incorporated into the problematic of poverty, a deeper insight is obtained regarding the various factors behind the phenomenon. It is generally believed that climate change is affecting the already marginalized and poor more than those of higher social standing, and will increasingly do so in the future. The data for this study was collected during a three month field work in the states of Pernambuco and Paraíba in Northeast Brazil. The main methods used were semi-structured interviews and participant observation, including attending seminars concerning climate change on the field. The focus of the work is to compare both layman and expert perceptions on what climate change is about, and question the assumptions about its effects in the future, mainly that of increased numbers of ‘climate refugees’ or people forced to migrate due to changes in climate. The focus on droughts, as opposed to other manifestations of climate change, arises from the fact that droughts are not only phenomena that develop over a longer time span than floods or hurricanes, but is also due to the historical persistence of droughts in the region, and both the institutional and cultural linkages that have evolved around it. The instances of structural violence that are highlighted in this study; the drought industry, land use, and the social and power relations present in the region, including those between the civil society, the state and the private agribusiness sector, all work against a backdrop of symbolic and moral realms of value production, where relations between the different actors are being negotiated anew with the rise of the climate change discourse. The main theoretical framework of the study consists of Johan Galtung’s and Paul Farmer’s theory of structural violence, Ulrich Beck’s theory of the risk society, and James Scott’s theory of everyday peasant resistance.