FRUTUOSO, R. F. O.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6911031846668498; FRUTUOSO, Rosana Fernandes de Oliveira.
Resumo:
The research aims to analyze a group of farmers who are also market vendors, associated with
a marketing project for a popular market in the municipality of Areia, in the state of Paraíba,
held every Friday morning since 2008, called the "Producers' Market." We observed the social
dynamics involved in the creation and sustainability of the market, as well as the trajectories of
the social agents involved in the initiative and their expectations regarding the marketing
project. The project, which focuses on the commercialization of local production, is
characterized by offering local products free of pesticides, in contrast to products sourced from
CEASA and sold by vendors at the open market that takes place on Saturdays. We analyzed the
process of organization and coordination among different social actors and public and private
institutions, with an emphasis on characterizing the vendors and their business opportunities.
The methodological approach was mixed, integrating qualitative and quantitative methods
through the combination of various data collection techniques, such as bibliographic and
documentary research, primary and secondary data collection, participant observation,
interviews, and field notes. Furthermore, Bourdieu's concepts of social space and capital were
essential to understanding how the agents compete for these spaces and how the possession or
lack of certain capital influences their entry, permanence, or even exit from the market. The
results showed that the creation of the market and the association of market farmers were not
sufficient to consolidate the market as a collective project, as most farmers were unable to
remain. Of the few who stayed, some acquired new dispositions, which, together with the
capital accumulated throughout their individual trajectories, allowed them to build new capital
around the "Producers' Market" project and even launch other marketing ventures. Thus, their
participation in the market led to the reconstruction of subjectivities and the acquisition of new
knowledge by the participants, bringing significant changes to the dynamics of their lives.