Indigenous Policy and Politics in Twentieth-Century Brazil

Seth Garfield
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Abstract

Over the course of the 20th century, Brazil’s Indigenous population underwent dramatic change. Frontier expansion, agricultural modernization, and natural resource extraction led to the invasion of Indigenous lands and interethnic conflict. Indigenous peoples that had once secured refuge through territorial dominion were besieged by settlers and epidemic disease. Communities with longer histories of integration confronted expulsion, social marginalization, and bigotry. Dominant ideologies tended to dichotomize Indigenous peoples as cultural isolates or degenerates. The Brazilian state played a key role in the social transformation of the countryside through the expansion of transportation infrastructure, the subsidization of large-scale agriculture, and the promotion of mineral extraction and hydroelectric power. Upholding developmentalism as an economic and geopolitical imperative, the Brazilian state sought to mediate ensuing social conflicts. The Indigenous Affairs bureau aspired to conciliate interethnic tension through adoption of a protectionist policy and “tutelage” of Native peoples, yet full-fledged Indigenous acculturation, deemed indispensable for nation-building and market integration, remained the endgame. Confronting the onslaught on their lifeways, Indigenous peoples mobilized in defense of their communities. With the support of domestic and foreign allies, Native peoples in Brazil made significant advances in demographic recovery, political organization, and legal recognition of their lands and cultures. Nevertheless, the Indigenous populations of Brazil continue to struggle against land invasion and poverty, violence, social prejudice, and challenges to their constitutional rights. The history of Indigenous policy and politics in 20th-century Brazil reflects not only a minority population’s fight for cultural survival and social inclusion but a battle over the soul of a nation.
20世纪巴西的土著政策和政治
在20世纪的过程中,巴西的土著人口经历了巨大的变化。边疆扩张、农业现代化和自然资源开采导致了土著土地的入侵和种族间的冲突。曾经通过领土统治获得庇护的土著人民遭到定居者和流行病的围攻。具有较长融合历史的社区面临着驱逐、社会边缘化和偏见。主流意识形态倾向于将土著人民分为文化孤立者或文化堕落者。巴西国家通过扩大交通基础设施、补贴大规模农业、促进矿物开采和水力发电,在农村的社会转型中发挥了关键作用。坚持发展主义作为经济和地缘政治的必要条件,巴西政府试图调解随之而来的社会冲突。土著事务局希望通过采取保护主义政策和对土著人民的“监护”来缓和种族间的紧张关系,然而,被认为是国家建设和市场一体化不可或缺的全面的土著文化适应,仍然是最后阶段。面对对其生活方式的冲击,土著人民动员起来捍卫自己的社区。在国内外盟友的支持下,巴西土著人民在人口恢复、政治组织和对其土地和文化的法律承认方面取得了重大进展。然而,巴西土著居民继续与土地入侵、贫困、暴力、社会偏见和对其宪法权利的挑战作斗争。20世纪巴西土著政策和政治的历史不仅反映了少数民族为文化生存和社会包容而进行的斗争,也反映了一场争夺国家灵魂的斗争。
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