SOUZA, Rony W F de.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9600919257816593; SOUZA, Rony Willams Frutuoso de.
Resumo:
This study aims to understand the work and workers in the artisanal cachaça industry,
connecting their personal trajectories with the socioeconomic history of the brejo region
in Paraíba. Sugarcane plays a significant role in the economic and social formation of
Brazil, particularly in the Northeast. In the brejo of Paraíba, although situated on the
periphery of the plantation areas of the Zona da Mata, the sugarcane activity has
manifested in various ways: culturally, socially, economically, and in labor relations.
With the closure of sugar and alcohol mills in the early 1990s, the region faced an
economic void. In response, local actors mobilized their resources to create economic
alternatives, leading to the rise of rural tourism and artisanal cachaça production.
These activities, along with other local initiatives, allow elites to maintain and
strengthen their capital while providing workers with job opportunities and income to
support their families. Cachaça distilleries in the brejo vary in type and size, but the
production process is essentially the same: it includes planting, cultivating, and
harvesting sugarcane, followed by the transport of raw material for production, which
involves milling, fermentation, distillation, storage, and bottling. Additionally, cachaça
production and rural tourism are interconnected, allowing for the offering of tourist
services such as restaurants and guided tours of the production process. We
conducted field observations and spoke with numerous local actors, visiting eleven
distilleries and conducting five interviews with workers from one distillery in the region.
Through these interviews, we were able to relate the personal stories of our
interlocutors to the social history of the sugarcane industry in the region. The memories
and life trajectories of our interviewees reveal the experiences of many Northeastern
families over recent decades. Despite differences and challenges, these social agents
continually strive for better living conditions for themselves and their families in a
historically unfavorable context.