43 research outputs found
A marcha para o azul
The dictatorial policy of the Estado Novo made large use of the myth-lemma “Marcha para Oeste” as a factor of social mobilization for the conquest of the Brazilian hinterland. This was not a mere ideological ruse. Its mythical content was retrieved from cherished traditions of the nation’s cultural imagery. It was employed in political terms of order to back up the colonization practice of the regime
Rota menor: o movimento da economia mercantil de subsistência no centro-sul do Brasil, 1808-1831
Contrasting with the assumption of traditional historiography, the subsistence economy of Minas Gerais — particularly in the South — presented mercantile features apparent in the regional traffic of primary staple commodities and mainly in the supplying of the Rio de Janeiro market. After 1808, with the establishment of the Portuguese Court in Rio de Janeiro, the local market began to increase its own consumption capacity, draining the surplus from the producing areas. New roads linked the Southern Region of Minas with the town of Rio de Janeiro, thus providing an outlet for surplus production. The increasing merchandise flow led to the formation of an economy based on coffee production in the Paraíba Valley region. Moreover, the movement of “tropeiros” (cattledealers) and tradesmen contributed directly to the establishment of the coffee economy in this area. Landowners and “tropeiros” settled in the region and invested in coffee production. Together with tradesmen and court bureaucrats, who also became investors, they comprised the emerging class of coffee-owners.