De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2015
Autor(a) principal: Cardoso, Ludimila Stival lattes
Orientador(a): Nazareno, Elias lattes
Banca de defesa: Nazareno, Elias lattes, Patti, Carlos lattes, Chaveiro, Eguimar Felicio lattes, Menezes, Gerson Galo Ledezma, Oliveira, Marcelo Fernandes de
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: por
Instituição de defesa: Universidade Federal de Goiás
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Programa de Pós-graduação em Historia (FH)
Departamento: Faculdade de História - FH (RG)
País: Brasil
Palavras-chave em Português:
Área do conhecimento CNPq:
Link de acesso: http://repositorio.bc.ufg.br/tede/handle/tede/4665
Resumo: This thesis sought to analyze the presence and social participation of Brazilian foreign policy. We begin our analysis with an investigation of the dichotomy of Prospero and Caliban, two characters within William Shakespeare's play, "The Tempest" (1611), viewed by post-colonial thinkers as representative of the relationship between the colonizer and the colonized. For this thesis, these characters represent the distance between Brazilian foreign policy and Brazilian society. The first, Prospero, is symbolic of those thriving and in power, while the second, Caliban, is symbolic of those whose humanity has been removed by the prerogative of European domination, but who nevertheless resist domination (resist decolonization). We understand that what was needed was a "swing decolonization" in our thesis, so we discussed the prospect of "coloniality of power," of which we believe America, through the Atlantic trade route, to have been a constituent part of the training of the world system. Therefore, the world system and modern capitalism would also be considered colonial. But the "coloniality of power" is related, in particular, to a process that degrades a portion of the indigenous population, such as blacks, and also degrades women, due to their phenotypes, i.e., it is linked to the concept of "race" ("coloniality of being"), as well as to the knowledge of other ("coloniality of knowledge"), and to forms of spirituality and its relationship with nature ("coloniality of nature"). In other words, these strata would be lower than both ontological and epistemological orientation. These initial analyzes led us to revisit historical periods prior to the focus of this thesis: in particular, the time between the Proclamation of the Republic (1889) and the Vargas Era (1930 - 1945). We therefore arrive at colonization, the first contacts between the indigenous peoples and Europeans (Portuguese), the Iberian Union (1580 - 1640), the Portuguese Restoration (1640), and Independence (1822). This process and path has helped us understand how society and the Brazilian State itself is structured. The first is based on the "myth" of territorial greatness; and the second, by pressing the marks of inferiority, we discuss a perspective from the "coloniality of power" and an analysis, even incidentally, of various interpreters of Brazil. We reflect also on the indigenist policy undertaken since the colonial period until the institution of the Republic (1889) arriving in the Vargas (1930 - 1945). We realized with these analyzes that the objective of the Brazilian State was, mainly, to integrate the indigenous population into national communion, transforming it into a labor force, in addition to using it as a protector of borders. At this point, indigenous politics and foreign policy intersect, since one of the main scopes of the latter would be to ensure the safety of the Brazilian territory and, when possible, to enlarge it. We start, then, with an analysis of the reports of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs between 1889 and 1945. After analysis of this documentation, we explore the importance of the integrity of the territory for the Brazilian State, and examine also the existence of a speech in which Brazil appears as an advocate of the principles of a civilization whose political model is epistemic of a social and cultural conscience of the West. A speech that, in addition to addressing other issues, presents the presence and participation of a population contingent upon other ways of life, and other social and economic organization, i.e. indigenous and black. Still, it is an exception, this democratic deficit and participation has changed, to some extent, in the 1980s, when the social movements began to be interested in international affairs, by way of the fight for the maintenance of labor rights, at risk to deregulation of the labor market and a measure of economic liberalization. This process is, however, under construction and depends on an intercultural dialog, which makes the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its area of operation the place of intersection and connection.
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spelling Nazareno, Eliashttp://lattes.cnpq.br/1486334927436240Nazareno, Eliashttp://lattes.cnpq.br/1486334927436240Patti, CarlosChaveiro, Eguimar Feliciohttp://lattes.cnpq.br/9540141505352914Menezes, Gerson Galo Ledezmahttp://lattes.cnpq.br/0265453454118640Oliveira, Marcelo Fernandes dehttp://lattes.cnpq.br/4642047295608922Cardoso, Ludimila Stival2015-10-20T11:07:10Z2015-03-12CARDOSO, L. S. De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945). 2015. 270 f. Tese (Doutorado em Historia) - Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, 2015.http://repositorio.bc.ufg.br/tede/handle/tede/4665This thesis sought to analyze the presence and social participation of Brazilian foreign policy. We begin our analysis with an investigation of the dichotomy of Prospero and Caliban, two characters within William Shakespeare's play, "The Tempest" (1611), viewed by post-colonial thinkers as representative of the relationship between the colonizer and the colonized. For this thesis, these characters represent the distance between Brazilian foreign policy and Brazilian society. The first, Prospero, is symbolic of those thriving and in power, while the second, Caliban, is symbolic of those whose humanity has been removed by the prerogative of European domination, but who nevertheless resist domination (resist decolonization). We understand that what was needed was a "swing decolonization" in our thesis, so we discussed the prospect of "coloniality of power," of which we believe America, through the Atlantic trade route, to have been a constituent part of the training of the world system. Therefore, the world system and modern capitalism would also be considered colonial. But the "coloniality of power" is related, in particular, to a process that degrades a portion of the indigenous population, such as blacks, and also degrades women, due to their phenotypes, i.e., it is linked to the concept of "race" ("coloniality of being"), as well as to the knowledge of other ("coloniality of knowledge"), and to forms of spirituality and its relationship with nature ("coloniality of nature"). In other words, these strata would be lower than both ontological and epistemological orientation. These initial analyzes led us to revisit historical periods prior to the focus of this thesis: in particular, the time between the Proclamation of the Republic (1889) and the Vargas Era (1930 - 1945). We therefore arrive at colonization, the first contacts between the indigenous peoples and Europeans (Portuguese), the Iberian Union (1580 - 1640), the Portuguese Restoration (1640), and Independence (1822). This process and path has helped us understand how society and the Brazilian State itself is structured. The first is based on the "myth" of territorial greatness; and the second, by pressing the marks of inferiority, we discuss a perspective from the "coloniality of power" and an analysis, even incidentally, of various interpreters of Brazil. We reflect also on the indigenist policy undertaken since the colonial period until the institution of the Republic (1889) arriving in the Vargas (1930 - 1945). We realized with these analyzes that the objective of the Brazilian State was, mainly, to integrate the indigenous population into national communion, transforming it into a labor force, in addition to using it as a protector of borders. At this point, indigenous politics and foreign policy intersect, since one of the main scopes of the latter would be to ensure the safety of the Brazilian territory and, when possible, to enlarge it. We start, then, with an analysis of the reports of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs between 1889 and 1945. After analysis of this documentation, we explore the importance of the integrity of the territory for the Brazilian State, and examine also the existence of a speech in which Brazil appears as an advocate of the principles of a civilization whose political model is epistemic of a social and cultural conscience of the West. A speech that, in addition to addressing other issues, presents the presence and participation of a population contingent upon other ways of life, and other social and economic organization, i.e. indigenous and black. Still, it is an exception, this democratic deficit and participation has changed, to some extent, in the 1980s, when the social movements began to be interested in international affairs, by way of the fight for the maintenance of labor rights, at risk to deregulation of the labor market and a measure of economic liberalization. This process is, however, under construction and depends on an intercultural dialog, which makes the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its area of operation the place of intersection and connection.Esta tese procurou analisar a presença e participação social na política externa brasileira. Começamos nossas análises tendo como mote investigativo a dicotomia Próspero/Caliban, duas personagens da peça A tempestade (1611) de Willian Shakespeare, vistas por pensadores pós-coloniais como a representação das relações entre colonizador e colonizado. Para esta tese, essas personagens poderiam significar distância entre a política externa e a sociedade brasileira. A primeira ligada ao Próspero e a segunda ao Caliban, aquele ser do qual é retirado a prerrogativa de humanidade pelo domínio europeu, mas que resiste à dominação (resistência decolonial). Compreendemos que era necessário um “giro decolonial” em nossa tese, por isso discutimos a perspectiva da colonialidade do poder, a partir da qual entendemos que a América era parte constitutiva da formação do sistema-mundo, por meio da rota comercial do Atlântico. Assim, o sistema-mundo moderno e capitalista seria também colonial. Mas a colonialidade do poder está relacionada, sobretudo, a um processo de inferiorização de contingentes populacionais indígenas, negros/afrodescendentes e femininos em razão de seus fenótipos, ou seja, está ligada à noção de “raça” (colonialidade do ser), assim como aos saberes outros (colonialidade do saber) e às formas de espiritualidade outras e suas relações com a natureza (colonialidade da natureza). Em outras palavras, esses estratos seriam inferiores tanto ontológica quanto epistemologicamente. Essas primeiras análises nos levaram a revisitar períodos históricos anteriores ao momento em foco na tese: o lapso de tempo entre a Proclamação da República (1889) e a Era Vargas (1930 – 1945). Voltamos, pois, à colonização, os primeiros contatos entre indígenas e europeus (portugueses), a União Ibérica (1580 – 1640), a Restauração Portuguesa (1640) e a Independência (1822). Um caminho que nos ajudou a compreender como a sociedade e o Estado brasileiro se estruturaram. O primeiro baseado no “mito fundador” da grandeza territorial. E a segunda carregando as marcas da inferioridade, perspectiva que discutimos a partir da colonialidade do poder e de uma análise, ainda que en passant, de diversos intérpretes do Brasil. Detemo-nos também sobre a política indigenista empreendida desde o período colonial até a instituição da República (1889) chegando à Vargas (1930 – 1945). Percebemos com essas análises que o objetivo do Estado brasileiro era, principalmente, integrar o indígena à comunhão nacional transformando-o em mão de obra, além de utilizá-lo como protetor de fronteiras. Nesse ponto política indigenista e política externa se aproximam, já que um dos principais escopos desta última seria assegurar a integridade do território brasileiro e, quando possível ampliá-lo. Começamos, então, a análise dos relatórios do Ministério das Relações Exteriores entre 1889 e 1945. Após a análise dessa documentação, ratificamos a importância da integridade do território para o Estado brasileiro e percebemos também a existência de um discurso no qual o Brasil aparece como defensor dos princípios da civilização, cujo modelo político, epistêmico, social e cultural é o Ocidente. Um discurso que, além de outras questões, inviabiliza a presença e participação de contingentes populacionais com outras formas de existência e de organização social e econômica, ou seja, indígenas e negros/afrodescendentes. Ainda que, cabe uma ressalva, esse déficit democrático e de participação tenha se alterado, em alguma medida, nos anos 1980, quando os movimentos sociais começaram a se interessar pelos assuntos internacionais, em razão da luta pela manutenção dos direitos trabalhistas, em risco pelas medidas de liberalização econômica e desregulamentação do mundo do trabalho. Esse processo está, contudo, em construção e depende de um diálogo intercultural, que torne o Ministério de Relações Exteriores e sua área de atuação o lugar do interepistêmico.Submitted by Cláudia Bueno (claudiamoura18@gmail.com) on 2015-10-19T20:43:38Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Ludimila Stival Cardoso - 2015.pdf: 3817230 bytes, checksum: 46564422564b45b15babfcf03a3f277a (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5)Approved for entry into archive by Luciana Ferreira (lucgeral@gmail.com) on 2015-10-20T11:07:10Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Ludimila Stival Cardoso - 2015.pdf: 3817230 bytes, checksum: 46564422564b45b15babfcf03a3f277a (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2015-10-20T11:07:10Z (GMT). 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dc.title.por.fl_str_mv De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
dc.title.alternative.eng.fl_str_mv Of Calian to Prospero: the brazilian society and the foreign policy of the Republic (1889 - 1945)
title De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
spellingShingle De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
Cardoso, Ludimila Stival
Decolonialidade
Colonialidade do poder
Política externa
Brasil
Sociedade
Decolonization
Coloniality of power
Foreign policy
Brazil
Society
HISTORIA DO BRASIL::HISTORIA DO BRASIL REPUBLICA
title_short De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
title_full De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
title_fullStr De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
title_full_unstemmed De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
title_sort De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945)
author Cardoso, Ludimila Stival
author_facet Cardoso, Ludimila Stival
author_role author
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Nazareno, Elias
dc.contributor.advisor1Lattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/1486334927436240
dc.contributor.referee1.fl_str_mv Nazareno, Elias
dc.contributor.referee1Lattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/1486334927436240
dc.contributor.referee2.fl_str_mv Patti, Carlos
dc.contributor.referee3.fl_str_mv Chaveiro, Eguimar Felicio
dc.contributor.referee3Lattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/9540141505352914
dc.contributor.referee4.fl_str_mv Menezes, Gerson Galo Ledezma
dc.contributor.referee4Lattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/0265453454118640
dc.contributor.referee5.fl_str_mv Oliveira, Marcelo Fernandes de
dc.contributor.authorLattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/4642047295608922
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Cardoso, Ludimila Stival
contributor_str_mv Nazareno, Elias
Nazareno, Elias
Patti, Carlos
Chaveiro, Eguimar Felicio
Menezes, Gerson Galo Ledezma
Oliveira, Marcelo Fernandes de
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Decolonialidade
Colonialidade do poder
Política externa
Brasil
Sociedade
Decolonization
Coloniality of power
Foreign policy
Brazil
Society
topic Decolonialidade
Colonialidade do poder
Política externa
Brasil
Sociedade
Decolonization
Coloniality of power
Foreign policy
Brazil
Society
HISTORIA DO BRASIL::HISTORIA DO BRASIL REPUBLICA
dc.subject.cnpq.fl_str_mv HISTORIA DO BRASIL::HISTORIA DO BRASIL REPUBLICA
description This thesis sought to analyze the presence and social participation of Brazilian foreign policy. We begin our analysis with an investigation of the dichotomy of Prospero and Caliban, two characters within William Shakespeare's play, "The Tempest" (1611), viewed by post-colonial thinkers as representative of the relationship between the colonizer and the colonized. For this thesis, these characters represent the distance between Brazilian foreign policy and Brazilian society. The first, Prospero, is symbolic of those thriving and in power, while the second, Caliban, is symbolic of those whose humanity has been removed by the prerogative of European domination, but who nevertheless resist domination (resist decolonization). We understand that what was needed was a "swing decolonization" in our thesis, so we discussed the prospect of "coloniality of power," of which we believe America, through the Atlantic trade route, to have been a constituent part of the training of the world system. Therefore, the world system and modern capitalism would also be considered colonial. But the "coloniality of power" is related, in particular, to a process that degrades a portion of the indigenous population, such as blacks, and also degrades women, due to their phenotypes, i.e., it is linked to the concept of "race" ("coloniality of being"), as well as to the knowledge of other ("coloniality of knowledge"), and to forms of spirituality and its relationship with nature ("coloniality of nature"). In other words, these strata would be lower than both ontological and epistemological orientation. These initial analyzes led us to revisit historical periods prior to the focus of this thesis: in particular, the time between the Proclamation of the Republic (1889) and the Vargas Era (1930 - 1945). We therefore arrive at colonization, the first contacts between the indigenous peoples and Europeans (Portuguese), the Iberian Union (1580 - 1640), the Portuguese Restoration (1640), and Independence (1822). This process and path has helped us understand how society and the Brazilian State itself is structured. The first is based on the "myth" of territorial greatness; and the second, by pressing the marks of inferiority, we discuss a perspective from the "coloniality of power" and an analysis, even incidentally, of various interpreters of Brazil. We reflect also on the indigenist policy undertaken since the colonial period until the institution of the Republic (1889) arriving in the Vargas (1930 - 1945). We realized with these analyzes that the objective of the Brazilian State was, mainly, to integrate the indigenous population into national communion, transforming it into a labor force, in addition to using it as a protector of borders. At this point, indigenous politics and foreign policy intersect, since one of the main scopes of the latter would be to ensure the safety of the Brazilian territory and, when possible, to enlarge it. We start, then, with an analysis of the reports of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs between 1889 and 1945. After analysis of this documentation, we explore the importance of the integrity of the territory for the Brazilian State, and examine also the existence of a speech in which Brazil appears as an advocate of the principles of a civilization whose political model is epistemic of a social and cultural conscience of the West. A speech that, in addition to addressing other issues, presents the presence and participation of a population contingent upon other ways of life, and other social and economic organization, i.e. indigenous and black. Still, it is an exception, this democratic deficit and participation has changed, to some extent, in the 1980s, when the social movements began to be interested in international affairs, by way of the fight for the maintenance of labor rights, at risk to deregulation of the labor market and a measure of economic liberalization. This process is, however, under construction and depends on an intercultural dialog, which makes the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its area of operation the place of intersection and connection.
publishDate 2015
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2015-10-20T11:07:10Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2015-03-12
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dc.identifier.citation.fl_str_mv CARDOSO, L. S. De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945). 2015. 270 f. Tese (Doutorado em Historia) - Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, 2015.
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv http://repositorio.bc.ufg.br/tede/handle/tede/4665
identifier_str_mv CARDOSO, L. S. De Caliban a Próspero: a sociedade brasileira e a política externa da República (1889 – 1945). 2015. 270 f. Tese (Doutorado em Historia) - Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, 2015.
url http://repositorio.bc.ufg.br/tede/handle/tede/4665
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv por
language por
dc.relation.program.fl_str_mv 872832998794064114
dc.relation.confidence.fl_str_mv 600
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal de Goiás
dc.publisher.program.fl_str_mv Programa de Pós-graduação em Historia (FH)
dc.publisher.initials.fl_str_mv UFG
dc.publisher.country.fl_str_mv Brasil
dc.publisher.department.fl_str_mv Faculdade de História - FH (RG)
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal de Goiás
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