Navegando por Autor "LINHARES, Anna Maria Alves"
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Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) De caco a espetáculo: a produção cerâmica de Cachoeira do Arari (ilha do Marajó, PA)(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2007-09-25) LINHARES, Anna Maria Alves; BELTRÃO, Jane Felipe; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6647582671406048Artisans from Cachoeira do Arari, located in Marajó fields, in the State of Pará, they reproduce copied ceramic pieces of archeological objects found in stiff of the place. Nowadays, the objects are exposed in the Museum of Marajó, located in Cachoeira. The museum was created by Giovanni Gallo, Italian priest that arrived in the area in the 70's. The objective of this work is to analyze the several appropriation forms and reverse-significance of that archeological patrimony, the artistic and/or expository, the scientific and marketing, in other words, their several metamorphoses. It is worth to stress that the spectaclelization of that patrimony felt starting from the moment that of mere bits of Indians that lived in the area, called marajoaras, and that they cared the residents when found them in their houses yards, according to narratives orals, they turned tourist spectacles, commercial and cultural identification.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Um grego agora nu: índios marajoara e identidade nacional brasileira(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2015-06-19) LINHARES, Anna Maria Alves; FIGUEIREDO, Aldrin Moura de; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4671233730699231The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the dissemination of marajoara symbolism derived from archaeological pieces found in Marajó island. The documentary basis of this research consists of sources of the nineteenth century published in the journal of the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro, as well as newspapers of the twentieth century. From science, marajoara symbolism started to be used in art, architecture, clothing, public and private spaces. In handicrafts, the redefinition of the material culture is recurring until nowadays. We conclude that, from mere pieces found in archaeological sites, marajoara ceramic was coated of ennobled values, being spectacularized as an emblem of the Brazilian national identity.