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Asphalt dreams, concrete realities: Camelos and the struggle for a space to work in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

机译:沥青的梦想,现实的现实:卡梅洛斯和在巴西圣保罗争取工作空间的斗争。

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摘要

Sidewalk vendors occupy a peculiar place in contemporary urban landscapes. They are ubiquitous in many large cities of the world. Yet, they often maintain ambiguous positions in physical, cultural, political and socioeconomic spaces simultaneously. Sao Paulo, Brazil is no exception. My dissertation examines the ways camelos, as vendors are often called in Brazil, navigate the material and symbolic spaces in which they operate. Focusing on the experiences, interactions, conversations and practices of a group of camelos, the dissertation explores the relationship between work, identity, space and citizenship in contemporary Sao Paulo. I argue that the ambiguity engendered by camelos' work practices and everyday experiences, in relation to various realms of social life, forces us to rethink the role of work in the formation of modern subjects and the obligations of the State in the contemporary world.;The dissertation illustrates how vendors' economic practices reside at the interstices of categories like legality and illegality, public and private space, employment and unemployment. In contrast to traditional understandings of an "informal economy" then, I suggest that the work practices of unlicensed sidewalk vendors in Brazil, and elsewhere, may be better understood as constituting a set of interstitial work practices.;The bulk of the dissertation explores how the liminal aspects of their work foster a constant uncertainty in vendors' everyday experiences, in spite of their relatively mundane labor routines. Descriptions of such routines provide the context to analyze the interactions camelos have with each other, with pedestrian-clients, and with city agents---particularly police and tax collectors---and local governments who attempt to regulate their work. Contextualizing the research historically, the penultimate chapter sketches a genealogy of "interstitial work practices" in Sao Paulo and other Brazilian cities from colonial times through the 20th century. The dissertation concludes by elaborating the concept of interstitial work further by considering unlicensed sidewalk vending as an economic, spatial, social, cultural, aesthetic, political and historically situated work practice. Furthermore, the final analysis paves the way for re-thinking studies on the informal economy as well as recent research on cities and citizenship that take struggles around housing as their primary focus.
机译:人行道摊贩在当代城市景观中占据着独特的位置。它们在世界许多大城市无处不在。然而,他们经常同时在物理,文化,政治和社会经济空间中保持模棱两可的地位。巴西圣保罗也不例外。我的论文研究了骆驼,因为在巴西经常叫卖主,他们在其经营的物质和象征空间中导航。本文着眼于一组骆驼的经验,互动,对话和实践,探讨了当代圣保罗工作,身份,空间和公民身份之间的关系。我认为,骆驼的工作实践和日常经验对社会生活的各个领域产生的含糊不清,迫使我们重新考虑工作在现代主题的形成中的作用以及国家在当代世界中的义务。论文阐述了卖方的经济实践如何存在于合法性和非法性,公共和私人空间,就业和失业等类别的间隙中。与传统的对“非正规经济”的理解相反,我建议将巴西和其他地方的无牌人行道摊贩的工作实践更好地理解为构成一组插页式工作实践。;本文的大部分内容探讨了如何尽管他们的劳动习惯相对平凡,但他们的工作的局限性却在卖方的日常经验中不断带来不确定性。对此类例程的描述为分析骆驼彼此之间,与行人-客户以及与城市代理人(尤其是警察和收税员)以及试图规范其工作的地方政府之间的相互作用提供了背景。倒数第二章概述了这项研究的历史背景,概述了殖民时期至20世纪巴西圣保罗和其他巴西城市的“插页式广告习惯”系谱。论文最后通过将无证人行道贩卖视为一种经济,空间,社会,文化,审美,政治和历史悠久的工作实践,进一步阐述了间隙工作的概念。此外,最终分析为重新思考关于非正规经济的研究以及最近以住房问题为主要焦点的关于城市和公民身份的研究铺平了道路。

著录项

  • 作者

    Mahiri, Jelani Kamau.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Cultural.;Hispanic American Studies.;Economics Labor.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2007
  • 页码 263 p.
  • 总页数 263
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:40:25

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