Histórias e relatos sobre Pipa: a praia internacional do Rio Grande do Norte
The overwhelming gear that boosted tourism as the main economic activity of Pipa a district formerly agricultural and fishery, that belongs to the municipality of Tibau do Sul/RN produced significant changes in the social, economic and cultural rights of the native population of the place where...
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Formato: | Dissertação |
Idioma: | por |
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Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte
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Endereço do item: | https://repositorio.ufrn.br/jspui/handle/123456789/13657 |
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Resumo: | The overwhelming gear that boosted tourism as the main economic activity of
Pipa a district formerly agricultural and fishery, that belongs to the municipality of
Tibau do Sul/RN produced significant changes in the social, economic and cultural
rights of the native population of the place where social relations were narrow and
justified in some cases, the line of kinship in an environment where all residents
knew each other. However, we can not observe the emergence of this activity just as
voracious disarticulator of old local forms of sociability that in a linear process,
destroys the old, replacing it with the new. New compositions are generated by
merging elements of past and present. Overcoming opposition to simplistic positive
or negative impacts of tourism sought especially in this dissertation, review the
history of Pipa (told in narrative form), showing how slowly this district has become a
major international tourist destination and how its residents were being swallowed by
the "whirlwind" that led to this reality. The research used qualitative methodology and
was based on photographic, literature and survey, observation, experience, oral and
written reports acquired in the field. We conducted in-depth interviews (oral history)
with subjects that are the living memory of the place local residents (mostly
natives). We found that before the process of "modernization" resulting from the
pressure of globalization itself and the capital investment in tourism resulting from the
native population is not passive. On the contrary, natives resist, creating mechanisms
of material and symbolic reformulations. The present moment is always dynamic.
Because of that, the identity of a place is not the crystallization of its past. Many
landscapes still reveal materialities of yesteryear, such as registration of social
practices in the construction of the place |
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