Journalism integration, cultural life
In a study on the press in the first decades of the twentieth century, Karina Woitowicz Janz (2003) provides some clues that can indicate how the scheduled culture and built with and by the action of the daily, from the most important newspaper of the case study circulated in Curitiba (circa 1912-16). It is from the late nineteenth century that the introduction of rotating, linotype and paper rolls, plus the standard format winning membership, newspapers also begin to take on more business features, increase print runs and thus change the work process itself and writing styles, adopting more commonly as 'literary news' (which has its peak between the 1890s and 1920), gives priority to the debate on current affairs and, simultaneously, to untie the political and doctrinal commitments that mark the Brazilian press to the entrance of the republican period.
In the menu of the newspapers, the literature also could not miss, remember Karina Woitowicz (2003, p.18), "came in the form of separate texts in verse and prose, or serials which have proved a real fever in the national press". In discussing how the print media is articulated, Woitowicz addresses what is called a discursive do, where "the newspaper will say (and to some extent also doing) the city."
The early twentieth century can also be understood from the John River texts. It is, moreover, at that time (between the last years of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the first decade of the twentieth century), the climate of bohemian marked the intellectual network of urban life in the then federal capital. "Living the literature may be the phrase that best define these bohemian intellectuals" (Brandão, 2003, p. 75) that made the history of time.
[...] Writing and style manual. São Paulo, Estado de S. Paulo p.55. MEDINA, Cremilda. News a product for sale: Journalism in the urban and industrial society ed. London: Summmus 1988. MELO, José Marques. The opinion in the Brazilian Journalism ed. Petropolis: Voices ORTIZ, Renato. The Modern Brazilian Tradition: Brazilian Culture and Cultural Industry. [...]
[...] But these transformations of the Brazilian cultural field - and thus also the press - can be discussed at another time and text. JANK, Helena et al. History in Focus: a songwriter under the New State (1937-1945). Report Scientific Initiation Search Final PIBIC / CNPq. Campinas, Unicamp MAGALDI, Sabato. Presentation. In: TBC: chronicle of a dream. Sao Paulo: Perspective MARTINS, Eduardo. O Estado de S. Paulo. [...]
[...] Driven by urban growth, especially in São Paulo, "the middle class differentiate and acquire a greater purchasing power. The nationalist policy of the Vargas period, appreciation of regionalism and the recent emergence of radio - electrical valves - as the main vehicle of communication bring a greater spread of Rio and northeastern music and the viola. "At the same time, "from the 30s, the country music happens to be written to disk." However, "side of the wider dissemination of Brazilian music to the American and Latin will occupy space in the local ears" (DOE p. [...]
[...] Bologna: Italy, Baskerville. Taschner, Gisela. The wind leaves: analysis of a newspaper conglomerate in Brazil. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra Tinhorão, José Ramos. Popular Music: a topic for discussion. 3rd ed. São Paulo: Editora Tinhorão, José Ramos. Social history of Brazilian popular music. São Paulo: Editora Surveyed sites: http://www.editoracontexto.com.br. http://pt.wikipedia.org http://www.observatoriodeimprensa.com.br http://pt.wikipedia.org. [...]
[...] In his own way, and a way to politically retracted, the press - by bringing together writers with the newspaper space in various newspapers, magazines and even specialist periodicals existing in the country - allows the existence of a literary critics circuit, theater , arts or film. For the evaluation of Renato Ortiz (1995, p. "it is only in the 40s that can seriously consider the presence of a number of activities related to a mass popular culture in Brazil." That's because one of the conditions to reach this stage is the existence of an urban-industrial society, which can only be considered as reality in Brazil from the 1940s, especially after the Second World War. [...]
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