Bush that turns into sea, sea that turns into bush: territory in movement at the fisherman village of Barra de Ararapira (Ilha do Superagüi, Guaraqueçaba, Paraná)

Authors

  • Juliane Bazzo Federal University of Paraná

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2316-9133.v20i20p65-85

Keywords:

Traditional Peoples and Communities, Territoriality, Environment, Conservation Unit, Land Conflicts

Abstract

Located on the island of Superagüi, State of Paraná (Brazil), the fishing village of Barra de Ararapira covers a territory constantly changing. A natural process of erosion - the call originated bar - imposes on its inhabitants the need for periodic transfer of buildings on land and fishing routes. In 1997, when enlargement Superagüi National Park, Bar deArarapira was included within this protected area whose boundaries are given by oordenadas? Plaints that just match the mobility of the territory of the village. Occurs so the clash between two different rationalities: on one hand, a group of strong ties with their place thanks to the constant exercise of memory, on the other, a public policy in which national parks are areas of protected areas, where human action is vetoed to ensure the future of the planet.

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Author Biography

  • Juliane Bazzo, Federal University of Paraná
    Master in Social Anthropology at the Federal University of Paraná (UFPR)

Published

2011-03-30

Issue

Section

Articles and Essays

How to Cite

Bazzo, J. (2011). Bush that turns into sea, sea that turns into bush: territory in movement at the fisherman village of Barra de Ararapira (Ilha do Superagüi, Guaraqueçaba, Paraná). Cadernos De Campo (São Paulo, 1991), 20(20), 65-85. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2316-9133.v20i20p65-85