122 research outputs found
An Archaeology of Colonialism and the Persistence of Women Potters’ Practices in Brazil: From Tupiniquim to Paulistaware
The archaeology of colonialism has been recently reconceived as the investigation of persistent cultural practices that connect the past and the present which values alterities and cosmologies. In São Paulo, the singular alliance between Tupiniquim and the Portuguese starting in ca. 1502 CE generated practices that linked knowledge structures from the pre-colonial period to the present. This study compares three types of ceramics and interprets incorporative cultural practices of the Tupiniquim that explain how they bring in the Portuguese “other” – as people and as pottery practice – as a way of persisting; and explores the ways in which this relationship is different to allies and willing partners in the colonial process. The complexity of colonial relationships modified cultural practices, and the exchange and articulation of knowledge resulted in the society of São Paulo. Tupiniquim women transformed Portuguese ceramics into Paulistaware, which signifies not a cultural loss, but cultural persistence.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Arte Pré-Histórica no Brasil
PROUS, André. Arte Pré-Histórica no Brasil. Belo Horizonte: C/Arte, 2007. 127p. ISBN 978-85-7654-033-5
Narratives of Persistence: Indigenous Negotiations of Colonialism in Alta and Baja California. Lee M. Panich, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 2020. 240 pp., 20 figs., 4 tables,index. $55.55 cloth
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
O homem pré-histórico no litoral norte, RS, Brasil – de Torres a Tramandaí
BECKER, Jussara Louzada. O homem pré-histórico no litoral norte, RS, Brasil – de Torres a Tramandaí. Três Cachoeiras: s. e., 2007. v. 1. 93p
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