RECREATIONAL SOCIETIES AND BLACK ASSOCIATIVISM: AGGRESSIONS IN SANTA CATARINA AFTER POSSIBILITY (1903-1950)
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Abstract
This article aims to discuss how recreational societies were interpreted by researchers, who bothered to analyze these organizations of Afrodescendants in post-Abolition. Through bibliographic review and the exercise of microanalysis, we can perceive the limits and advances that the debate about these spaces of the Afro-Brazilian community provoked and provoke in the academic environment. Far from exhausting interpretations about these associations, we try to understand what concepts are being used and how these research influences and influences the debate about race relations in Brazil. Also, to understand the debate that permeated the theme of recreational societies, the moment in which they were built and under what conditions they emerged, as well as their purposes. Our analyzes depart from the micro-analytic method and its conceptual and interpretative framework, understanding the complexity that permeates the construction of these recreational societies of Afrodescendants in post-abolition.
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