Região Metropolitana de Goiânia (RMG)
URI Permanente desta comunidade
Navegar
Navegando Região Metropolitana de Goiânia (RMG) por Assunto "(Auto)representação"
Agora exibindo 1 - 1 de 1
Resultados por página
Opções de Ordenação
Item Culturas de fronteiras: (auto)representações da juventude em cenários de violência urbana na cidade de Luziânia/GO(Universidade Federal de Goiás, 2023-02-27) Matutino, Aurisberg Leite; Guimarães, Leda Maria de Barros; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1491866271915819; Guimarães, Leda Maria De Barros; Perotto, Lilian Ucker; Abreu, Carla Luzia de; Silva, José Carlos de Paiva e; Castro, Gardene Leão deThis doctoral dissertation aims to problematize images of violence among youth that have been manufactured in contemporary society by opposing them—in different analytical layers, interdependent on each other—to several other images that help researchers to perceive a counter-image formed from a series of visualities produced by the young people of the city of Luziânia, Goiás. This counter-visuality is presented in this work, layer by layer, according to the experiences and cultural practices of these participant youth with whom I had the opportunity to be in touch throughout the doctoral research. The goal of this proposal is to think over forms of representation and self-representation triggered by black and poor youth in scenarios of urban violence, redirecting the gaze to their own ways of participation and resistance. The methodological approaches used in this work are snowball sampling (a technique used in certain types of qualitative research where personal networks and “mouth to mouth” references are created to catch up with the participants) and cartography, which ended up shaping a layer-based format, less “motionless,” rather than a structure based on chapters. The opportunity to listen to the young subjects who participated in this research especially incites us to question prevailing discourses on “young people from the unprivileged areas,” the black and impoverished people, as “delinquents” and “criminals,” contributing to bring out other perspectives on how contemporary youth that live in areas of urban violence can deconstruct stigmas and rebuild their own images.