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Carnaval em casa

dc.contributor.authorSnyder, Andrew
dc.contributor.institutionInstituto de Etnomusicologia - Centro de Estudos em Música e Dança (INET-MD - NOVA FCSH)
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-29T01:38:10Z
dc.date.available2022-03-29T01:38:10Z
dc.date.issued2022-01-04
dc.descriptionUIDB/00472/2020 UIDP/00472/2020
dc.description.abstractThe carnival of 2021 of Rio de Janeiro was unprecedently cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the city administration knew it would have to enforce the decision and convince residents to avoid celebrating despite the restrictions. Importantly, officials had the support of the samba schools and the blocos of street carnival, and the blocos organized a manifesto and campaign declaring that in 2021 carnival would be “at home.” While many scholars have shown how street music can mobilize revelers, this article shows that the blocos of Rio’s street carnival also have the capacity to demobilize them. Their campaign drew on familiar carnivalesque and Brazilian tropes to rationalize a biopolitical message of civic responsibility, respect for life, and resistance to virus denialism. They played on long-standing Brazilian tropes of carnival as an ephemeral moment whose presence is fleeting and soon experienced as saudade, or nostalgia. I explore various manifestations of the campaign, including its manifestos and arguments, as well as some of the alternatives that were offered, such as virtual carnival performances and new carnival songs adapted to the situation. By inverting their traditional demands to occupy the streets and instead limiting festivity to domestic space, the blocos framed their plea not as a departure from carnival tradition, but as fundamentally carnivalesque. I argue that classic carnival theories are best understood as performative rather than an explanatory; that is, it is how carnival practitioners deploy the carnivalesque tropes of inversion as elements of a persuasive discourse that is my focus.en
dc.description.versionpublishersversion
dc.description.versionpublished
dc.format.extent30
dc.format.extent2051256
dc.identifier.doi10.33823/jfs.2021.3.1.93
dc.identifier.issn2641-9939
dc.identifier.otherPURE: 36027863
dc.identifier.otherPURE UUID: b0cf9808-5ece-41c2-b722-5fc43a05738d
dc.identifier.otherORCID: /0000-0001-6914-4086/work/106091992
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10362/135395
dc.identifier.urlhttps://journals.h-net.org/jfs/article/view/93
dc.language.isoeng
dc.peerreviewedyes
dc.subjectCarnival
dc.subjectRio de Janeiro
dc.subjectActivism
dc.subjectFestivity theory
dc.subjectPandemic
dc.titleCarnaval em casaen
dc.title.subtitleActivist Inversions in Rio de Janeiro's Street Carnival during the COVID-19 Pandemicen
dc.typejournal article
degois.publication.firstPage17
degois.publication.lastPage46
degois.publication.titleJournal of Festive Studies
dspace.entity.typePublication
rcaap.rightsopenAccess

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