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Tese
O quadrilátero cabano e as cabanagens nos Sertões da Amazônia: guerra, índios, rios e matas (1790-1841)
This study covers indigenous participation in the Cabanagem Revolution. From a historical narrative, this thesis sets out to understand the Cabanagem Revolution that took place in Amazon backlands based on the indigenous protagonism around the actions of three ethnic groups, the Mura, the Munduru...
Autor principal: | BARRIGA, Letícia Pereira |
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Grau: | Tese |
Idioma: | por |
Publicado em: |
Universidade Federal do Pará
2024
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Assuntos: | |
Acesso em linha: |
https://repositorio.ufpa.br/jspui/handle/2011/16211 |
Resumo: |
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This study covers indigenous participation in the Cabanagem Revolution. From a historical
narrative, this thesis sets out to understand the Cabanagem Revolution that took place in
Amazon backlands based on the indigenous protagonism around the actions of three ethnic
groups, the Mura, the Munduruku and the Mawé. Inhabitants and masters of an immense area,
the interfluve of the Madeira, Tapajós and Amazonas rivers, these indigenous people have
printed their cultural marks with their arts of war and own interests, leading the cabanagem
battles in the interior of the province towards increasingly radicalized directions, shaping their
territory into a Cabano Quadrilateral. Through ancestral knowledge of forest, the indigenous
people were able to act in an imperative way, determining in a large extent the advances and
setbacks of the Cabanagem Revolution. In this sense, within a chronological arrangement, the
thesis develops its narrative supporting its main argument that the Cabanagem lasted so long,
leading to a process that was difficult to resolve due to its radicalization by the effective
indigenous participation. Throughout the eight chapters the thesis is based, showing how
indigenous actions from the second half of the 18th century, but especially 1790, and in the
first two decades of the 19th century, went through a process of reworking their ways of
opposing the colonial project. Thus, in the 1830s, their actions were radicalized, broking with
the institutional channels of resolving their issues, and deciding for armed struggle, taking
part in the civil war that broke out in Grão-Pará. Using the method of the indicative paradigm
and the methodology of Ethnohistory, we located, through the traces left in the
documentation, the indigenous evidence in the Cabanagem built in the Amazon backlands. |