Rio de Janeiro Essays

  • Essay About Rio De Janeiro

    1999 Words  | 8 Pages

    beckon visitors to unravel the marvels of Rio de Janeiro themselves. History of Rio de Janeiro: Rio de Janeiro is the city it is today because of its historical past. Portuguese rulers were the first ones to rule Rio as they landed on the soil of Guanabara Bay on the 1st of January, 1502. The bay forms the opening of a river, hence the name ‘Rio de Janeiro’ which means ‘River of January’. The French also wanted to make the best of the strategic position of Rio in the Brazilian region and tried to make

  • Essay On Brazil Carnival

    762 Words  | 4 Pages

    were searching for some ways to make the teaching lesson of the dance to be more organized. Ismael Silva, from Estácio then created the term escola de samba which means samba school. The samba school system often appear to fortify the validity of the Afro-Brazilian cultural heritage in contrast to the mainstream education system. During Rio de Janeiro Carnival, the samba schools all around

  • Comparing Telus And Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

    1462 Words  | 6 Pages

    This report will approach the main differences between mandatory and extra benefits offered by companies in British Columbia, Canada and in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to their employees. The market chosen is telecommunications, in which Telus Corporation and Tim Brasil are both part of, each in its home country. As the companies differ by its laws and rights for each country or region, the mandatory benefits offered by the companies are not the same. Moreover, the cultural differences are reflected in

  • What Is Gordon Parks Thesis In Flavio's Home

    720 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the short story “Flavio’s Home”, the author Gordon Parks expresses the poverty in Rio de Janeiro. Gordon Parks was a journalist, and photographer for “Life Magazine” and “Vogue Magazine”. Parks went to Rio De Janeiro in 1990 to enlighten the United States about the poverty-stricken areas in Brazil. The assignment given to him was to find an impoverished father with a family, and examine his earnings. Contrarily, when Parks seen a boy named Flavio; he became fascinated by his appearance and began

  • Religion In Brazil Essay

    1216 Words  | 5 Pages

    country is separated into twenty-seven states; Acre, Alagoas, Amapa, Amazonas, Bahia, Ceara, Distrito Federal, Espirito Santo, Goias, Maranhao, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Minas Gerais, Para, Paraiba, Parana, Pernambuco, Piaui, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Norte, Rio Grande do Sul, Rondonia, Roraima, Santa Catarina, Sao Paulo, Sergipe, and Tocantins. In 1888, Brazil abolished slavery, which was a huge step for them. In 1917, Brazil was among the Allied countries that declared war on Germany in

  • Samba Music History

    881 Words  | 4 Pages

    Rio de Janeiro is the capital of Brazil where Samba originated. Samba was firstly evolved in Rio, Brazil and it became a new and unique genre in the early twentieth century. The blacks would come together to form a group and play different kinds of percussive instruments such as surdos, caixas, tamborins, cuica, reco-reco and agogo and dance. There are no proper written notations for Samba music as many devotees say, “It’s something that runs in my veins, it’s in my blood.” This is what makes Samba

  • Samba Essay

    918 Words  | 4 Pages

    In 1888 the slavery in Brazil ha been abolished and many used Samba to survive, this music genre spread in Rio officially the 1889. The first real Samba star was Sinhô José Barbosa Silva born in the 1888, he wrote lyrics about the everyday life in Rio De Janeiro, in the meanwhile in Rio De Janeiro were built the first schools of Samba and then spreading in the major Brazil cities with the goal of creating a new kind of carnival groups. In South America

  • Analysis City Of God

    1213 Words  | 5 Pages

    The film City of God is directed by Fernando Meirelles in 2002. It is based on a novel of the same name by Paulo Lins in 1996. City of God is the name of the slum in Rio de Janeiro. The film is shut inside a real slum, and shows the violence in it. In the film, there is a character that represent hope, Rocket, who dreams of becoming a photographer. After watching the film, personally I can see how these people in the city of god slum live and how they are isolated from other cities of the same country

  • Lucy Walkers, Waste Land

    1211 Words  | 5 Pages

    Rio De Janeiro, Brazil is home to one of the largest wastelands in the world. In Lucy Walkers, Waste Land (2010), she gives insight into the lives that exist amongst that garbage and what little inspiration they have left for life. In order to provide the Catadores (pickers) of Jardim Gramacho (community/garbage tip) with a new found motivation for a better way of living, Walker, along with the infamous artist, Vik Muniz and his team, travel to Rio De Janeiro to put to practice the concept of turning

  • Stereotypes In Favelas

    1128 Words  | 5 Pages

    Rio de Janeiro is characterized by the abundance of favelas, and these favelas are marked by the stereotypes that these are spaces filled with violence and overrun by drug gangs. Favelas are constantly “seen as prime symbols of difference” which “are by definition irregular and pathological” since they are not part of the ‘regular city’ (44, 12). It is important to consider the way that different identities, such as traficantes, police, and residents intersect and interact while examining life in

  • Analysis Of Samba By Alma Guillermoprielo

    1957 Words  | 8 Pages

    Samba, written by Alma Guillermoprielo, is a fascinating account of the experiences Guillermoprielo went through during Carnival season in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. For one year, Alma Guillermoprieto lived in Manguiera, a village near Rio de Janeiro, to experience the samba lifestyle. Her exploration was to find the meaning, history, and spirituality that drives samba. In order to explore this new culture, Guillermoprieto joins a local samba school, Mangueira, to see first hand what samba is. After

  • Poverty In Gordon Parks Flavio's Home

    1184 Words  | 5 Pages

    lands in the continent of Africa. Now, imagine it a hundred times worse, with no proper housing, limited water and sewage system, and lacking food and other general necessities. You would get a picture of Catacumba, a favela located in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro. Also, this is where Gordon Parks meets a particular boy, who would inspire him to write about the atrocities of the favelas. In his memoir “Flavio’s Home”, Gordon Parks delineates a vivid picture of poverty through his faithful encounter of one

  • Wasteland Reaction Paper

    1283 Words  | 6 Pages

    Wasteland is a documentary by Lucy Walker that depicts the lives of selected garbage pickers in Jardim Gramacho – a massive dumpsite found in the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. The film is about Vik Muniz’s 2-year journey back to his home country seeking to give back to an impoverished community through making images out of an unusual material – trash. The film featured 7 garbage pickers from the landfill, and each has a story that brought them to their current places. One unique thing about the whole

  • Sociological Analysis Of City Of God

    1268 Words  | 6 Pages

    In the Movie City of God it is shot in the slums of Rio de Janeiro’s. In this city, cops never show up, combat photographers are scared to death to go there and the average age of the residents are lucky to make it into their twenties. Once one is in the slums it is very hard to get out at least a live that is. The film was depicted during the late 1960’s to the early 1980’s. Living in these conditions one may never know how long they will live or what they will do with their life. In the article

  • The Importance Of Cultural Diversity In Brazil

    783 Words  | 4 Pages

    experiences. The attractions in Brazil are endless, but there a few of which I’d be delighted to make memories on. That is to say, Rio de Janero would be one of them, which is where the statue of Jesus Christ is located. Also, Rio Carnival would be an option since it is considered the “largest carnival celebration in the world” (History of Carnival in Rio De Janeiro, traveltips.usatoday.com). Not to mention, I’d also like to visit Pantanal, the “world’s largest wetland” (touropia.com), including

  • Ryan Lochte Court Case Study

    1427 Words  | 6 Pages

    U.S. Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte has apologized for his conduct encompassing a late-night episode at a Rio de Janeiro corner store, saying he ought to have been more "watchful and real" about how he portrayed what happened. Lochte said in a long post on Instagram Friday that he was apologizing for his part in removing the center from other Olympic competitors. The 12-time Olympic medalist repeated his affirmation that an outsider pointed a firearm at him and requested cash to give him a chance

  • Vik Muniz Marat Analysis

    1064 Words  | 5 Pages

    who are ex-convicts or were homeless and unemployed and therefore had little opportunity in their lives. The Catadores are a union headed by Sebastião that separate recyclable items from the rest of the trash at the Jardim Gramacho landfill in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to be sold on the market. The profits from selling these items are then split amongst the union. Muniz became very intrigued with this group of people and decided to recreate a variety of famous portraits

  • City Of God Summary

    1135 Words  | 5 Pages

    Brief Summary The film City of God is a account of the harsh realities that existed in Rio de Janeiro during the 1960’s. The film follows the story of two boys Rocket & Li'l Zé and how they both rise out of their violent and improvised circumstances; one becoming a photographer and the other a drug dealer. Aesthetic Analysis and Theory When one looks at this film’s aesthetic, it showcases itself to be heavily influenced by other world cinemas. Although this film came some thirty years or so after

  • Research Paper On Paulo Coelho

    638 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paulo Coelho was born on the 24th of August in 1947 to two devout Catholics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. By an early age, they had enrolled him in a Jesuit school system in hopes of him aspiring to one day be a priest. Wanting to be a writer, Coelho told his parents of his dream, and as a result, they committed him to an asylum at the age of 17. He endured electroconvulsive treatment, which is shock treatment, to adjust his “rebellious” ways (“The Alchemist-Paulo Coelho Biography” 1). When he left

  • Gordon Parks Struggle Against Poverty In Flavio's Home

    1090 Words  | 5 Pages

    exclusively around this “most savage of all human afflictions.” Throughout the years, Parks has become known as an advocate against poverty after his most famous essay, Flavio’s Home. In Flavio’s Home, Parks explores the slums on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro on assignment in the 1960s. While photographing the Favelas, Parks meets Flavio, a sickly 12-year-old, who later explains he lives as one of the many families in the Favelas. In his heart-wrenching, guilt-bringing essay for Life and Vogue Readers