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Doctoral Thesis
DOI
https://doi.org/10.11606/T.47.2019.tde-30082019-173412
Document
Author
Full name
Lucila de Jesus Mello Gonçalves
E-mail
Institute/School/College
Knowledge Area
Date of Defense
Published
São Paulo, 2019
Supervisor
Committee
Pereira, Joao Augusto Frayze (President)
Barone, Leda Maria Codeço
Goncalves Filho, Jose Moura
Junqueira, Carmen Sylvia de Alvarenga
Moure, Walter Gustavo
Rosalen, Juliana
Title in Portuguese
O campo e o capim: investigações sobre o sonhar nos Kamaiurá
Keywords in Portuguese
Encontro onírico
Kamaiurá
Psicologia e povos indígenas
Saúde indígena
Sonhos
Xingu
Abstract in Portuguese
O que o mundo indígena nos ensina sobre o sonhar? Esta pesquisa foi realizada na aldeia de Ipavu, onde vivem os índios Kamaiurá, no Parque Indígena do Xingu, e situase no campo da Interculturalidade. O trabalho teve como objetivo inicial investigar as concepções de sonho dos Kamaiurá, bem como verificar se o sonho poderia ser tomado como uma faceta de enraizamento, índice de saúde diante do crescente contato da comunidade com elementos da cultura ocidental. A partir das experiências de campo, discutiu-se também a função do sonho em sua dimensão comunitária, bem como o uso dos sonhos como comunicação etnográfica. Tanto as concepções ameríndias sobre o sonhar como a experiência de encontro onírico permitiram ampliar os pressupostos da psicologia e da psicanálise sobre os sonhos, pois ofertaram elementos para compreendê-los não somente na dimensão individual, mas também na dimensão compartilhada e comunitária
Title in English
The Field and the grass: investigations on dreaming in the Kamaiurá
Keywords in English
Dream meeting
Dreams
Indigenous health
Kamaiurá
Psychology and indigenous peoples
Xingu
Abstract in English
What does the indigenous world have to teach us about dreaming? This intercultural research was carried out in the village of Ipavu, inhabited by the Kamaiurá Indians, in the Xingu Indigenous Park. The objective of this work was to investigate the dream conceptions of the Kamaiurá as well as to verify if the dream could be taken as a rooting factor, a health index in the face of the growing community contact with elements of Western culture. Field research was the starting point to discuss the function of dreams in its community dimension, as well as the use of dreams as ethnographic communication. The Amerindian conceptions of dreaming and their experience of dream-encounter allowed us to expand the presuppositions of psychology and psychoanalysis on dreams, since they offered elements to understand them not only in the individual dimension, but also in the shared and communitarian dimension
 
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Publishing Date
2019-09-02
 
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