2 resultados para Contrôles inhibiteurs descendants

em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde


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Most stereotypes about Africans and their descendants started with colonialism in the fifteenth century. The encounter between Africans and Europeans facilitated the creation of myths and stereotypes about the colonized peoples, which were made effective through the naturalization of differences. The relationship between skin color and slavery developed to produce a racialized system of forced labor on which colonialism depended for its survival. Stereotypes functioned to legitimize colonial authority by building the notion that the colonizer ruled over the colonized because of an innate superiority. Therefore, stereotyping is an effective "discursive strategy" (Bhabha) based on fixity and repetition with the aim of controlling the other. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin and José Evaristo D’Almeida O Escravo both denounced the evils of slavery in the United States of America and Cape Verde respectively, claiming for the end of the institution. However, they are both ambivalent towards slaves and blacks, being unable to envisage social equality for the two races. Both authors construct their black characters as stereotypical others, but they depict the light-skin characters as superior both culturally and physically. The bi-racial characters are portrayed as the ones who possess beauty and intelligence as an inheritance from their European ancestry, while blacks are relegated to the margins. We need to consider, however, that slavery in Cape Verde had different characteristics from its counterpart in the United States of America. In Cape Verde the Africans outnumbered the Europeans and that circumstance favored miscegenation and the emergence of forms of mixed culture, which came to be seen as positive and natural. In the United States of America miscegenation was regarded as a taboo since early. And even after Emancipation, “the one-drop rule” made the offspring of an African descendant black, however 'white' he or she might be.

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The research presented here aimed to analyze the processes of integration of Cape Verdeans immigrants descendants of living in the neighborhood of Talude, Town of Unhos, Municipality of Loures. To analyze the central object of research - the process of integration of descendants of migrants in the neighborhood of Talude we tried to answer the following questions, which reflect the objectives of the research:  What are the paths of socialization the descendants of immigrants: at the family, at school, in employment, in the neighborhood and in other activities?  What is the influence of gender relations in the processes of integration of descendants?  What are the perception the of immigrants descendants living in the neighborhood of Talude in relation to how they are viewed by residents of the Town residents in the neighborhood? And the people or society in general? And what influence these perceptions have in their process of integration? This study consists in two parts: the design of the survey, which is depicted on the reason for the choice of topic, the definition of the topic, research objectives, the method that was used in the course of investigation and the framing of the issue. In the second part, the analysis of data in different pathways: family, neighborhood, school, labor market, in other activities, the influence of gender and image(s). As a general conclusion we can say that there are several factors that contribute to the identification of immigrant descendants (there are no apparent factors that predominate) and the images they have of themselves and the Portuguese society in general are diverse.