01. Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco - UFRPE (Sede)
URI permanente desta comunidadehttps://arandu.ufrpe.br/handle/123456789/1
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Item Modernização do recife imperial: a construção do mercado público de São José (1875-1880)(2023-09-12) Silva, Gabrielle Brito da; Silva, Wellington Barbosa da; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1213688229016782; http://lattes.cnpq.br/5861154945053466Inaugurated at 11 am, on September 7, 1875, the São José market, which was placed between Rua de Pedro Affonso and the courtyard in front of the Church of Nossa Senhora da Penha, as stated in the documentation, was received with many celebrations. , as it was considered the newest and most modern building in the city of Recife. With its opening, people flocked to the city center in a festive mood to observe it. The transformations that resulted in the construction of the new market began at the end of the 18th century, when Capuchin friars from the Convent of Nossa Senhora da Penha de França asked the then governor, D. Tomás José de Mello, to change the location of the meat market and fish, formerly located in Praça do Polé, where Praça da Independência is currently located, to the centrality where fishing took place, in the neighborhood of São José, soon becoming known as Largo da Ribeira do Peixe. The purpose of this work is to understand how and why it was necessary to create a public establishment, where the main goal was to establish a behavioral pattern mirrored in the transformations that took place in Europe. The creation of the São José Market was involved in a project to transform Recife into a modern and civilized city. Its inauguration in 1875 aimed to replace the old Mercado da Ribeira, a place where, during part of the 19th century, it was occupied by popular people who did popular trade and supply in the city. Analyzing the 19th century, it is possible to observe the building of the public market, as a project resulting from a discourse on modernity and civility, with the purpose of bringing an innovative undertaking, but which was involved in a medical-hygienist project with the intention of regulating a space destined both for food purchases and for the circulation of people.Item Imperialismo estadunidense e dependência latino-americana: o ciclo de ditaduras empresariais-militares a partir das experiências brasileira e chilena(2023-04-25) Ávila, João Marcelo de Farias Rocha; Marçal Filho, José Carlos Gomes; http://lattes.cnpq.br/5449086191539864; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7093772919202439The present work aims to investigate the correlation between United-Statesian imperialism, latin-american dependence and the Southern Cone’s entrepreneurial-military dictatorships cycle (1954-1990). Our hypothesis is that the dictatorships cycle on the subregion of the American continent has served to deepen dependence’s conditions of implicated latin-american countries, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, and broaden imperialism’s and its greatest agent, the United States, scope of action. Thereto, we introduce the conceptual presuppositions of the dependence theory. Initially we present Latin America’s historical-estructural formation process and its establishment and consolidation as periphery of the world capitalist system. We analyze United-Statesian imperialism’s manifestation’s emergence and expansion throughout the American continent. We address, even, of international division of labour’s reconfiguration post-World War II, to ascertain dependent capitalism’s new character that it entails. Forwardly, we take as study cases two of the processes of instauration of entrepreneurial-military dictatorships of said cycle, that of Brazil, in 1964, and that of Chile, in 1973. We peer into United-Statesian imperialism’s decisive weight, through numerous factual sources, allied to the national bourgeoisies, in the fomentation and conduction of Brazilian and Chilean coups. Ultimately, we observe the political-economic effects that the Brazilian and Chilean states of exception brought about, such as denationalization of national capitals, massive penetration of foreign capitals and military-police repression. Such effects have served in favor of national dependent and central imperialist bourgeoisies’ interests, demonstratively beneficiaries of the whole process. We verify, thereby, taking by example Brazilian and Chilean experiences, that the entrepreneurial-military dictatorships cycle occurred in the Southern Cone had acquired a fascist content, in the persecution of barring popular movement’s growing strength and deepen latin-american historical dependence, at the same time enlarging United-Statesian imperialism’s margins of action over the continent.