Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX

This article examines the form in which indigenous peoples were placed on display in regional and universal expositions in the Brazilian Empire, Europe, and the United States. Focusing on archaelogical and ethnographic collections assembled by different museums, the author shows that these practices...

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Main Author: Amoroso Marta
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade de São Paulo 2006-06-01
Series:Revista de História
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/19024
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spelling doaj-72af8fb8c13e4ee19d1a03ad8d7360022020-11-24T23:31:38ZporUniversidade de São PauloRevista de História0034-83092316-91412006-06-01015411915010.11606/issn.2316-9141.v0i154p119-15019001Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIXAmoroso Marta0Universidade de São Paulo; Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas; Departamento de AntropologiaThis article examines the form in which indigenous peoples were placed on display in regional and universal expositions in the Brazilian Empire, Europe, and the United States. Focusing on archaelogical and ethnographic collections assembled by different museums, the author shows that these practices were linked to the official "Cathecism and Civilization" program and to the mission villages (aldeamentos) of the Brazilian Empire, which became the main source of the collections displayed during the reign of Pedro II. Controlled by Italian Capucin monks, the mission villages also afford a glimpse at the ways in which Kaiowá, Kaingang, Krahó, Xerente, and Sateré-Mawé Indians approached the public sphere at both the provincial and Imperial levels, bearing messages that alluded to new subjectivities and to new forms of inclusion, in response to government policies promoting the spatial rearrangement of indigenous populations as well as stimulating both internal migrations and European immigration.http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/19024Exposições UniversaisAldeamentos IndígenasMissões CapuchinhasMigraçõesImigração Européia
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amoroso Marta
spellingShingle Amoroso Marta
Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
Revista de História
Exposições Universais
Aldeamentos Indígenas
Missões Capuchinhas
Migrações
Imigração Européia
author_facet Amoroso Marta
author_sort Amoroso Marta
title Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
title_short Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
title_full Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
title_fullStr Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
title_full_unstemmed Crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século XIX
title_sort crânios e cachaça: coleções ameríndias e exposições no século xix
publisher Universidade de São Paulo
series Revista de História
issn 0034-8309
2316-9141
publishDate 2006-06-01
description This article examines the form in which indigenous peoples were placed on display in regional and universal expositions in the Brazilian Empire, Europe, and the United States. Focusing on archaelogical and ethnographic collections assembled by different museums, the author shows that these practices were linked to the official "Cathecism and Civilization" program and to the mission villages (aldeamentos) of the Brazilian Empire, which became the main source of the collections displayed during the reign of Pedro II. Controlled by Italian Capucin monks, the mission villages also afford a glimpse at the ways in which Kaiowá, Kaingang, Krahó, Xerente, and Sateré-Mawé Indians approached the public sphere at both the provincial and Imperial levels, bearing messages that alluded to new subjectivities and to new forms of inclusion, in response to government policies promoting the spatial rearrangement of indigenous populations as well as stimulating both internal migrations and European immigration.
topic Exposições Universais
Aldeamentos Indígenas
Missões Capuchinhas
Migrações
Imigração Européia
url http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/19024
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