FERREIRA, J. J. L.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/5294813730853073; FERREIRA, Jilton Joselito de Lucena.
Resumo:
As a research objective, I sought to analyze the sports radio journalism of Campina Grande by
understanding the time between 1950 and 2011, period in which most of the most significant
changes happened in this segment of the local radio media. It was necessary to investigate the
local sports radio journalism as a constitutive radio segment in the social fabric of Campina
Grande, where I based myself mainly on the contributions of Sandra Pesavento and her works
that have cities as background, because thinking about such radio segment is to reflect on its
interaction with the city, the dynamics between its social agents and their sociopolitical and
cultural plots in its surroundings. To do so, I took as research sources a series of personal
documents - chronicles, diaries, diaries and photographs - produced, selected and kept by
Joselito Pereira de Lucena, one of the most active sports chroniclers in Campina Grande,
working in radio between 1950 and 2011. By “preserving the traces of his own activity”, as
suggested by Sue McKemmish (2013), Joselito Lucena ended up providing a series of clues
likely to be problematized in the light of History. In his personal archive, it is possible to
perceive signs of various social relations and cultural dynamics raised in front of the practice
of sports - with greater emphasis on soccer - and its dissemination in Campinas radio, object of
our spatial and temporal cut. In addition to the chronicles, diaries, journals, and photographs
found in his personal archive, I collected a set of interviews with fans, chroniclers, and listeners
of the programs that comprise the indicated time frame. We understand that the methodology
of Oral History, as Bosi (2003) thought, has the necessary tools for us to read these dynamics
and, as Roger Chartier (1990) points out, the “games of representations”, both agencyed by
Joselito Lucena and by his listeners, seeking “a possibility of perception of how a social reality
is constructed, in other moments or places, through delimitations, divisions, and
classifications”. It was possible to trace a path between Campina Grande at the end of the 1940s,
when radio appeared in the city, and to go through the decades that followed, observing the
emergence and consolidation of Campina Grande's sports radio journalism, the dynamics
between radio professionals and the population, and how sports chroniclers, such as Joselito
Lucena, appeared and became part of the fans' lives, in the case of Joselito Lucena, becoming
a monument man, a concept based on the readings of Le Goff (1990). Taking such documents
as sources to understand such relations motivated this initiative facing the exercise of “making
history”, problematizing them to operate a narrative that aimed to understand the history of
sports radiojournalism in Campina Grande, from the personal archive of the sports journalist
Joselito Pereira de Lucena and how he and his listeners represented this period lived by them.