vibrant v.10 n.2 ii
Conselho Editorial
Beatriz Heredia (ifcs/ufrj) [email protected] Bela Feldman Bianco (unicamp) [email protected] Claudia Fonseca (ufrgs) [email protected] Gustavo Lins Ribeiro (unb) [email protected] Jane Beltrão (ufpa) [email protected]
João Pacheco de Oliveira Filho (ufrj/mn) [email protected] Lívio Sansone (ufba) [email protected]
Lux Vidal (usp) [email protected]
Manuela C. da Cunha (Universidade de Chicago) [email protected] Maria do Carmo Brandão (ufpe) [email protected]
Mariza Peirano (unb) [email protected] Omar Thomas (Unicamp) [email protected]
Patrícia Monte-Mor (uerj) [email protected] Paul Elliott Little (unb) [email protected]
Rafael M. Bastos (ufsc) [email protected] Roberto Kant de Lima (uff) [email protected] Ruben Oliven (ufrgs) [email protected]
vibrant v.10 n.2 iv
Editor: Peter Fry, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Co-editor: Carmen Rial, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Reviews Editor: Lilia Moritz Schwarcz, Universidade de São Paulo International relations: Gustavo Lins Ribeiro, Universidade de Brasília Editorial Supervision: Antonio Luz Costa, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Design & typesetting: Gabriel H Lovato gabrielhl.com
Cover image: Fernando Lemos, Cada vez somos mais..., 1978. Litography (85 × 47 cm). Artist’s Collection.
V626
Vibrant : Virtual Brazilian Anthropology / Associação Brasileira de Antropologia. Vol. 1, n. 1/2 (jan./dez. 2004) – . Brasília : Associação Brasileira de Antropologia, 2004 -
v.
Semestral ISSN 1809-4341
1. Antropologia - Periódicos. I. Associação Brasileira de Antropologia.
CDD : 301
Apoio
vibrant
v. 10, n. 2 07 – 12 / 2013Articles
13 In and Around Life Biopolitics in the Tropics Pedro Paulo Gomes Pereira 39 “All Against Pedophilia”
Ethnographic notes about a contemporary moral crusade Laura Lowenkron
73 Eduardo Mondlane and the social sciences Livio Sansone
Dossier Migration and Exile
Editors: Bela Feldman-Bianco, Liliana Sanjurjo, Desirée Azevedo & Douglas Mansur da Silva
113 Foreword
Part 1: The Meanings of Immigration in Brazilian History
118 The diverse understandings of foreign migration to the South of Brazil (1818-1950)
Giralda Seyferth
163 Immigration and the maintenance of the religious moral order The case of the Ruthenian immigration to
Parana in the late nineteenth century
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229 Para pensar las redes transnacionales Itinerarios e historias migratorias de los capoeiristas brasileños en Madrid Menara Lube Guizardi
Part 3: Deconstructing Exile
273 Portuguese writers and scientists exiled in Brazil Exclusion, cosmopolitanism and particularism (1945-1974) Douglas Mansur da Silva
305 Between Dictatorships and Revolutions Narratives of Argentine and Brazilian Exiles Desirée Azevedo and Liliana Sanjurjo
Part 4: Migration as Crime
340 Confounding Borders and Walls
Documents, letters and the governance of relationships in São Paulo and Barcelona prisons
Natália Corazza Padovani 377 Cinderella Deceived
Analyzing a Brazilian Myth Regarding Trafficking in Persons.
Ana Paula da Silva, Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette and Andressa Raylane Bento
Cover and section images
Fernando Lemos, Cada vez somos mais..., 1978. Litography (85 × 47 cm).
Artist’s Collection.
“Progress For Women Is Progress For Everyone” & “We Are All Immigrants”, signs at the May Day Immigration Rights Rally (Washington, DC) by takomabibelot or Jim Kuhn.
vibrant v.10 n.2 viii
Photo: Marcello Casal Jr./ABr Fernando Lemos, Desenho, 1955 . Ink on paper (63,2 × 44cm) The Museum of Contemporary Art, University of São Paulo collection
Fernando Lemos, Sem título, 1984.
From series Memórias Nº5. Ink on tracing paper (52 × 65cm). Artist’s Collection.