Haitian immigration in a city of german colonization (Joinville/SC - Brazil)
another historiographic view as support for resistance
Abstract
This article is an excerpt from a larger survey, carried out by the team under the Institutional Research Program *. The text makes a bibliographic survey about the historical formation of the city of Joinville regarding the presence of black people, and beyond the Germanic identity. Based on the review of authors committed to a new historiography of the city, a survey of data on Haitian immigration since the second decade of the 2000s is carried out, as well as the context that motivates this displacement. Then, a new theoretical contribution is made to understand the importance of language in identity and concludes by presenting the results of interviews with Haitian immigrants who are studying *. The result is a set of observations about how uncomfortable the Haitian presence is for some groups in the city, as well as about the language being a form of resistance to their identities.
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