The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Baldi, Dogomar González
Data de Publicação: 2019
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://doi.org/10.34624/fb.v0i15.2059
Resumo: The myth of the Promised Land is present in almost all the worldwide ancestral cultures and was carried along with the human emigrational movements. The present paper aims to show the Argentinian Pampa as a landscape that could be identified with ancient idea of the Promised Land. The Pampa biome is located in South America and covers an area of 750.000 km2, occupying half of the Rio Grande do Sul (a southern Brazilian state), all the Uruguay territory and almost the 20% of the northeast Argentinian region. The Pampa was originated during the cretaceous period with the Andes Mountain upheaval, shortly before dinosaur extinction. Early from its origins, the Pampa biome showed no significant surface alterations and in the last 12,000 years, during Pleistocene, the first groups of hunter-gatherers arrived in these lands and lived together with the local megafauna. The descendants of these human groups had to face and fight against the Spaniards who came to seek for natural wealth and planning to settle in the New World. After centuries, once the republic of Argentina was consolidated as an independent country, the Pampa remained a challenge. In the last quarter of the 19th century, Father Jose Gabriel Brochero, known as “the Gaucho Priest”, decided to serve the needs of small towns neglected by the central Argentinian government authorities, building churches, schools and roads. He regarded the Pampa as an ideal place to restore the biblical Eden because the good condition of this biome allowed man a second chance to live in harmony with his creator. In the same way, a considerable group of Jews decided to leave Czarist Russia because of anti-Semite intolerance and persecutions, came to Argentina, and settled in the province of Entrerios. These people were known as the Gaucho Jews. Thus, the Pampa turned into a second Promised Land again, the New Jerusalem, as it was so announced in the synagogues built in the country. And in order to defend this thesis, this essay counts on a frame of reference based upon Mircea Eliade, Mikhail Bakhtin, Gaston Bachelard and Ezequiel Martinez Estrada studies and theories, together with the author´s own considerations.
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spelling The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised LandA pampa argentina como cenário discursivo da terra prometidaThe myth of the Promised Land is present in almost all the worldwide ancestral cultures and was carried along with the human emigrational movements. The present paper aims to show the Argentinian Pampa as a landscape that could be identified with ancient idea of the Promised Land. The Pampa biome is located in South America and covers an area of 750.000 km2, occupying half of the Rio Grande do Sul (a southern Brazilian state), all the Uruguay territory and almost the 20% of the northeast Argentinian region. The Pampa was originated during the cretaceous period with the Andes Mountain upheaval, shortly before dinosaur extinction. Early from its origins, the Pampa biome showed no significant surface alterations and in the last 12,000 years, during Pleistocene, the first groups of hunter-gatherers arrived in these lands and lived together with the local megafauna. The descendants of these human groups had to face and fight against the Spaniards who came to seek for natural wealth and planning to settle in the New World. After centuries, once the republic of Argentina was consolidated as an independent country, the Pampa remained a challenge. In the last quarter of the 19th century, Father Jose Gabriel Brochero, known as “the Gaucho Priest”, decided to serve the needs of small towns neglected by the central Argentinian government authorities, building churches, schools and roads. He regarded the Pampa as an ideal place to restore the biblical Eden because the good condition of this biome allowed man a second chance to live in harmony with his creator. In the same way, a considerable group of Jews decided to leave Czarist Russia because of anti-Semite intolerance and persecutions, came to Argentina, and settled in the province of Entrerios. These people were known as the Gaucho Jews. Thus, the Pampa turned into a second Promised Land again, the New Jerusalem, as it was so announced in the synagogues built in the country. And in order to defend this thesis, this essay counts on a frame of reference based upon Mircea Eliade, Mikhail Bakhtin, Gaston Bachelard and Ezequiel Martinez Estrada studies and theories, together with the author´s own considerations.O mito da Terra Prometida permeia todas as culturas ancestrais do mundo e as acompanhou no constante processo de transumâncias. O presente trabalho tem por objetivo apresentar a pampa argentina como cenário identificável com a ideia ancestral da Terra Prometida. A pampa é um bioma da América do Sul que atinge uma superfície de quase 750 mil km2, ocupando a metade do território brasileiro do estado do Rio Grande do Sul, todo o território do Uruguay e quase o 20 % da Argentina. Originou-se no fim do período cretáceo com a elevação da cordilheira dos Andes, pouco antes da extinção dos dinossauros. Desde suas origens, seu relevo apresentou alterações pouco significativas, e a partir dos últimos 12 mil anos, durante o Pleistoceno, foi o cenário da chegada dos primeiros povoadores que conviveram com os animais da megafauna local. Os descendentes destes paleoindígenas confrontaram a chegada dos espanhóis que procuravam ouro e riquezas naturais e o desejo de povoar um novo mundo. Séculos depois, consolidada a república Argentina após a sua independência e posterior fim dos seus conflitos internos, a pampa continuava um desafio. No último quarto do século XIX, o padre José Gabriel Brochero assumiu as necessidades de um povoado esquecido pelas autoridades, criando capelas, igrejas e escolas, enxergando a pampa como espaço ideal para reivindicar a restauração do Éden bíblico. As bondades do bioma forneciam as condições necessárias para obter uma segunda chance e aprender a viver em harmonia individual e coletiva com a natureza e com o seu Criador. Neste sentido, também um contingente de judeus vindos da Rússia por causa das perseguições antissemitas afinca-se na província de Entre Ríos. Assim pampa tornava-se uma segunda Terra Prometida, uma Nova Jerusalem, anunciada nas prédicas da sinagoga. Para defender o presente pressuposto, o ensaio conta com um referencial teórico a partir dos estudos de Mircea Eliade, Mikhail Bakthin, Gaston Bachelard e Ezequiel Martínez Estrada, conjuntamente com as considerações do seu autor.UA Editora - Universidade de Aveiro2019-04-16info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleapplication/pdfhttps://doi.org/10.34624/fb.v0i15.2059https://doi.org/10.34624/fb.v0i15.2059Forma Breve; No 15 (2018): Em busca da terra prometida: mitos de salvação; 295-308Forma Breve; n.º 15 (2018): Em busca da terra prometida: mitos de salvação; 295-3082183-47091645-927Xreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAPporhttps://proa.ua.pt/index.php/formabreve/article/view/2059https://proa.ua.pt/index.php/formabreve/article/view/2059/1624Baldi, Dogomar Gonzálezinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess2023-11-23T18:46:26Zoai:proa.ua.pt:article/2059Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T16:02:40.255480Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
A pampa argentina como cenário discursivo da terra prometida
title The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
spellingShingle The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
Baldi, Dogomar González
title_short The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
title_full The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
title_fullStr The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
title_full_unstemmed The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
title_sort The Argentinian pampa as a discursive landscape of the Promised Land
author Baldi, Dogomar González
author_facet Baldi, Dogomar González
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Baldi, Dogomar González
description The myth of the Promised Land is present in almost all the worldwide ancestral cultures and was carried along with the human emigrational movements. The present paper aims to show the Argentinian Pampa as a landscape that could be identified with ancient idea of the Promised Land. The Pampa biome is located in South America and covers an area of 750.000 km2, occupying half of the Rio Grande do Sul (a southern Brazilian state), all the Uruguay territory and almost the 20% of the northeast Argentinian region. The Pampa was originated during the cretaceous period with the Andes Mountain upheaval, shortly before dinosaur extinction. Early from its origins, the Pampa biome showed no significant surface alterations and in the last 12,000 years, during Pleistocene, the first groups of hunter-gatherers arrived in these lands and lived together with the local megafauna. The descendants of these human groups had to face and fight against the Spaniards who came to seek for natural wealth and planning to settle in the New World. After centuries, once the republic of Argentina was consolidated as an independent country, the Pampa remained a challenge. In the last quarter of the 19th century, Father Jose Gabriel Brochero, known as “the Gaucho Priest”, decided to serve the needs of small towns neglected by the central Argentinian government authorities, building churches, schools and roads. He regarded the Pampa as an ideal place to restore the biblical Eden because the good condition of this biome allowed man a second chance to live in harmony with his creator. In the same way, a considerable group of Jews decided to leave Czarist Russia because of anti-Semite intolerance and persecutions, came to Argentina, and settled in the province of Entrerios. These people were known as the Gaucho Jews. Thus, the Pampa turned into a second Promised Land again, the New Jerusalem, as it was so announced in the synagogues built in the country. And in order to defend this thesis, this essay counts on a frame of reference based upon Mircea Eliade, Mikhail Bakhtin, Gaston Bachelard and Ezequiel Martinez Estrada studies and theories, together with the author´s own considerations.
publishDate 2019
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2019-04-16
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url https://doi.org/10.34624/fb.v0i15.2059
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publisher.none.fl_str_mv UA Editora - Universidade de Aveiro
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Forma Breve; No 15 (2018): Em busca da terra prometida: mitos de salvação; 295-308
Forma Breve; n.º 15 (2018): Em busca da terra prometida: mitos de salvação; 295-308
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