Geosul (Jul 2019)

Geographical interpretations in Oliveira Vianna

  • Diogo Marçal Cirqueira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5007/1982-5153.2019v34n72p202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 72
pp. 202 – 231

Abstract

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The purpose of this paper is to analyze the discussions of the Brazilian thinker Oliveira Vianna (1883-1951) about race and environment in the Brazilian society. It seeks to understand how the author tries to equate the two problems involving a formation of a "developed" and "civilized" Brazilian nation at the beginning of 20th century: the population mostly composed by "inferior race" and the determinations imposed by the degenerating tropical environment. Participating of a series of debates on a national project for Brazil, Vianna saw in the resolution of the race and environment issues a viable way for the country. Believing in "aryan" superiority, the author emphasizes the need to insert in the Brazilian territory a population from Europe. Producing a geographical discourse, the author establishes discussions on the men-environment relationship and makes a proposal of a regional planning for the rational allocation of “aryans types” in the Brazilian natural regions. It is important to understand the Vianna’s geographical discourse because he later influenced a set of geographers who sought to discuss the regional differences and the population in Brazil.

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