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Marialva Carlos Barbosa is Full Professor of Journalism at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) and retired full professor of journalism at the Federal Fluminense University, where she worked from 1979 to 2010. She has an undergraduate degree in Social Communication from the Federal Fluminense University (1992), a master’s in History from the Federal Fluminense University (1992), and a doctorate in History from the Federal Fluminense University (1996). She has a post-doctorate in Communication (1999) from LAIOS-CNRS, Paris – France. Scientific Director of INTERCOM from 2009 to 2011, she was also Vice-President of INTERCOM (2011-2014) and currently is President of INTERCOM (2014-2017). Her book História Cultural da Imprensa - Brasil 1900-2000 was the winner of the Carlos Eduardo Lins e Silva Medal, granted by INTERCOM, in 2007, to the most representative publications released in 2007. She won the Luiz Beltrão Prize in Communication Sciences, in the Academic Maturity category, in 2008, “for her body of work which is constituted by relevant studies that are nationally recognized in the area of Communication.” She was the first “Scientist From Our State” in the area of Communication through FAPERJ. She has dozens of articles in national and international magazines. She dedicates herself to research that makes the interconnection between history and communication. She has more than twenty published books, between authors and collections. Among the most recent, he following stand out: História da Comunicação no Brasil (Editora Vozes, 2013), Escravos e o mundo da comunicação: oralidade, leitura e escrita no século XIX (Editora MauadX, 2016) e A history of the press in the portuguese speaking countries (Media XXI, 2014), This collection is the first book in English on the history of the Portuguese-speaking press. |
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The manuscripts of Brazil: historical analysis of a forgotten chapter in the history of communication in Brazil
Description The research project intends to show how the construction of what we call the handwritten communicative order took place, as a sort of interregnum of the world of journalism that was transformed (in function of the new technologies that allowed the explosion of the printed word throughout the national territory to Starting in 1822) and the practices of an oral world that would determine the most striking feature of the history of communication in Brazil. The desire for journalism, along with numerous printed periodicals that began to be published in all the main cities of the country in the nineteenth century, also proliferated manuscript newspapers of all orders, formats and intentions. The aim is therefore to recover these ephemeral and lasting journals (as a network of texts) and, above all, to show how through a specific research methodology, aimed at recovering traces and indications of what existed in the past, one can To reinterpret a history that seemed sedimented, but that never referred to the manuscripts newspapers of Brazil. |
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