Book

Village and plantation life in northeastern Brazil

University of Washington PressSeattle • Published In 1957 • Pages:

By: Hutchinson, Harry William.

Abstract
This source is a socio-cultural analysis of the community of Vila Recôncavo in the sugar-producing region of the state of Bahia in northeastern Brazil, presented in the perspective of the long historical tradition of sugar-cane growing in the region. The author indicates how the abolition of slavery, the socio-political changes in colonial government in the 19th century and the eventual introduction of steam power enabling the development of large, centralized sugar mills, all led to important changes in the pattern of life in the area which had been previously based on sugar monoculture. These emergent socio-cultural patterns are the basic theme of this source and are discussed in terms of such current trends as the increased importance of the corporate owned sugar-processing factory (the USINA), the dissemination of national patterns, the beginning of the petroleum industry and the competition of sugar-cane growing with cacao planting. Town and plantation life are analyzed separately but the interrelationships between the two are also discussed in the chapters on class and race, the family and religion.
Subjects
Special crops
Labor
Occupational specialization
Labor relations
Classes
Ethnic stratification
culture
Bahia Brazilians
HRAF PubDate
1999
Region
South America
Sub Region
Eastern South America
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1969-1970
Field Date
1950-1951
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Vila Recôncavo, State of Bahia, Brazil
Notes
Harry William Hutchinson
Includes bibliographical references and index
LCCN
57008753
LCSH
Bahia (Brazil : State)