MEDEIROS, C. R. W.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1520268693847739; MEDEIROS, Cléryston Rafaell Wanderley de.
Abstract:
It identifies the main symbols and signs employed by the touristic discourse as
(re)makers of an "identity" assigned of the Seridó region through a study who has as
main thematic focus the St. Anne's feast, in Caicó. The research makes a
problematization about the historic formation process of spaces in the region of
Seridó North Rio Grande using as spatial recort the Caicó city, "capital" of the
recently created Touristic Pole of Seridó. Uses the method "exploratory research" in
bibliographical sources for the construction of a theoretical discussion based on
authors from anthropology, from the social sciences and the cultural history. Aims to
understand the "logic" of the formation of spaces created as a way to highlight the
places of the cultural systems of signification and the seridoenses identities by
regional tourism and understand how was possible the discursive formation and
socio-cultural of the places and non-places created by the activities for the sector in
question. The main conclusions are the ideas that this reorganization of space Seridó
occurs for a number of strategies that resignify local culture, introducing new identity
references, this time molded by external influences, by flows of people in constant
transit. It is noticed that these new references are based on an inter-regional touristic
market, in marketing strategies and sales of the destination, in the global flows of
people, in a global culture. With the transformation of identities and cultural
references become evident rather peculiar phenomena. First, the notion of space is
also transformed, causing important changes in some places. Secondly, the notion of
territory follows the same pattern. We believe that tourism Seridó region creates an
ambiguous movement and irreversible, in which, at the same time are transmuted
cultures, identities and places, are attributed, by the pressures of tourism,
representations of these same categories, crystallizing them. In this conception, in
the eyes of the world, also happens an crystallization. But these cultures, in reality,
would be in a constant process of resignification and transfiguration. Finally, we
discuss the notion of "seridoense identity ", showing how it has new meaning and,
indeed, is transmuted through the introduction of the logic of the "postmodern"
tourism. We conclude that this change of identity transforms the spaces of the region
transforming both into hybrid categories.