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segunda-feira, 3 de fevereiro de 2020
Peru Depenado (Peru Depenado) - Pedro Alexandrino
Peru Depenado (Peru Depenado) - Pedro Alexandrino
Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil
OST - 164x131 - 1900
Cozinha na Roça (Cozinha na Roça) - Pedro Alexandrino
Cozinha na Roça (Cozinha na Roça) - Pedro Alexandrino
Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil
OST - 131x110 - 1894
Angélica Acorrentada (Angélica Acorrentada) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
Angélica Acorrentada (Angélica Acorrentada) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
MASP, São Paulo, Brasil
OST - 100x81 - 1859
A Virgem do Véu Azul (A Virgem do Véu Azul) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
A Virgem do Véu Azul (A Virgem do Véu Azul) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
MASP, São Paulo, Brasil
OST - 80x66 - 1827
Cristo Abençoador (Cristo Abençoador) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
Cristo Abençoador (Cristo Abençoador) - Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres
MASP, São Paulo, Brasil
OST - 80x66 - 1834
domingo, 2 de fevereiro de 2020
Chevrolet Corvette C8 2020, Estados Unidos
Chevrolet Corvette C8 2020, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
Sometimes, a
car comes along that leaves the automotive landscape different than before. In
today's Silicon Valley parlance, we'd be tempted to term such a car a
"disrupter." The last car to so radically shift the car world was
the Tesla Model S, our 2013 Car of the Year.
This time
around, our 2020 MotorTrend Car of the Year, the Chevrolet
Corvette, fully scrambles the order of things. Simply put, never before has so
much four-wheeled exoticism been attainable for so little money. Or I should
say, so much good exoticism.
Chevrolet Performance
did not phone in the first-ever production mid-engine Corvette. It dialed it,
massaged it, honed it, crafted the new 'Vette to the point of the nearly
impossible. The eighth-generation car will bring people into dealerships who
previously would never have come in. The mid-engine Corvette is a game changer,
an inflection point, and a reminder that when Americans truly set our minds to
a task, look out. For soon you'll be standing on the moon—or driving the sports
car equivalent thereof.
The father of
the Chevrolet Corvette, Zora Arkus-Duntov, began working on a mid-engine
Corvette back in 1959. Called the 1960 CERV-I (for Chevrolet Engineering
Research Vehicle), the single-seater located its 283-cubic-inch pushrod V-8
small-block just aft of the driver's head. Subsequent CERV concepts only stoked
the belief among MotorTrend editors that such a vehicle was not only
possible but also likely.
Fast-forward
to September 2019, and we finally get our greedy, grubby hands on the 10th-ever
production mid-engine Corvette, an early-build, production-intent model with a
VIN that ends in 000010. From our weeks of testing the Corvette against a field
of formidable competitors, we can say Zora was onto something six decades ago.
"We've
been waiting so long for this car that, climbing in, I felt like a kid on
Christmas morning," Detroit editor Alisa Priddle said. "I didn't care
if it was going to be good or bad, I just wanted to unwrap the present and
drive it."
A very true
statement, as we've had our eye on the mid-engine Corvette ever since we broke
the story (yes, Virginia, it was us) back in August 2014. Half a decade is quite
a lengthy waiting period, and if life teaches you anything, it is to be
prepared for disappointment. Witness The Phantom Menace. All that
anticipation, so much hope, so much good will, all destroyed by a terrible
product.
Not here. I'm
happy in the extreme to report that the 2020 Corvette delivers the goods, and
does so in ways you wouldn't think possible.
"The C8
represents the biggest step change since the original Acura NSX in
terms of being a usable everyday mid-engine supercar," international
bureau chief Angus MacKenzie said. "It brings the Corvette closer to
the Porsche 911 in terms of being an attainable and credible 24/7
supercar than any time since the '60s."
The C8
(referencing the eighth generation of the Corvette) still features a
cam-in-block small-block V-8 right behind the passenger cabin, only it's grown
to 376 cubic inches, or 6.2 liters. But everything else is changed. The new
Corvette is all about disruption.
"The
first thing you notice when driving in town is the lack of road noise for a
supercar," said Chris Theodore, a perennial COTY guest judge as well as
the engineer behind the second-generation Ford GT. "It's not
silent, but it's much better than any other supercar I've driven."
That's right,
a mid-engine, removable-roof car that hits 60 mph in 2.8 seconds is being
praised for the quietness of its cabin. "This means that C8 engineers have
done a good job in making the chassis attachment points stiff," Theodore
continued.
The new
Corvette rides surprisingly well, too. "Behavior on the freeways was
remarkable," technical editor Frank Markus said. "In Tour mode it
felt as comfortable as anything we've driven—including the dorky,
tall-sidewall Nissan Leaf. And best of all, that ride quality didn't
disappear when we put it in Sport and Track modes." We were collectively
surprised by how smooth and polished the C8's chassis is.
We were also
equally surprised at the Corvette's high-quality cabin. To be blunt: Corvette
interiors have been nasty, low-quality dens of cheapness and weird smells since
1984. With always-terrible seats, too. That's the truth. With history as my
witness, I was expecting more of the same. To keep the price as low as Chevy has
promised, you'd think corners would have to be cut, and this would be the place
to cut them. Nope. "The interior actually has great build quality. What a
miracle!" associate online editor Stefan Ogbac said. "Lots of good
materials, and the seats are super comfortable and supportive."
What impressed
me most about the quality of the Corvette's cabin were the gear and drive mode
selectors. At first glance, the shifter looks similar to what you'd find in
the Acura NSX. The Corvette's gear selector is metal, about half the
size, and feels like something off a high-end stereo. As does the well-weighted
mode-selector puck. Think of a Marantz tuner from the 1970s, back when
"American Made" was king.
Everything is
laid out well, too. "Not only is the interior clever, and attractive, the
ergonomics are very good," road test editor Chris Walton said, "but
having a small screen, close to the driver, also enables you to rest your hand
on top and thumb the touchscreen without the unsteadiness you'd have without
the perch."
I love the squared
steering wheel (a few others did not) and the jet-age homage of its design,
though there was debate about the cabin's overall design. Some judges felt as
if there was a bit too much bling, but others liked it. As for the stream of
buttons that make up the HVAC controls and "puts up a wall," to quote
Walton, between the driver and the passenger/glove box, most judges felt that
these controls are of the set-and-forget variety. Plus, you just don't notice
them from behind the wheel. You do notice a couple inexplicable cheap outs,
especially if you're our executive editor Mark Rechtin. He despises the plastic
cupholders. "How much would improving them have cost Chevy? Five bucks a
unit?"
If the new
Corvette has a weakness, it's the exterior design. The judges' opinions ranged
from harsh (MacKenzie: "Bill Mitchell would be spinning in his grave.
") to damning with faint praise (Walton: "Fine from 100 feet.
").
The main
issue: As you get closer to the vehicle, you see tributaries of pointless lines
going off in every direction. This sort of sloppy linework—folds and creases
that exist for the sake of existence—first appeared on the previous generation.
Did the Corvette design team want to link the two products, to maybe help
convince current Corvette owners to trade up for the newer model? Perhaps.
Whatever the reason, although the car's shape is good, the details are not.
However, that just means that Chevy has a real opportunity in a few years with
the midcycle refresh. As our guest judge and former Jaguar design
boss Ian Callum said, "Great car to drive. Shame about the styling."
Right,
driving. What will convince current Corvette owners to trade in their cars is
the C8's performance. In truth, the new 'Vette's numbers and capabilities might
convince a few Porsche, BMW, and AMG owners to do the same. Might
convince more than a few, in fact.
We mentioned
the 0-60 time previously, but to contextualize that number, the 755-horsepower
C7 Corvette ZR1 hits 60 mph in 3.0 seconds. The 789-horsepower Ferrari 812
Superfast hits 60 mph in 2.8 seconds. Remember, the C8 with the Z51
Performance package makes "only" 495 horsepower. I won't even point
out the $377,000 price gap with Ferrari. Whoops, I just did.
Much of the
credit is due to the quick-shifting eight-speed dual-clutch transmission. Big
takeaway: We've yet to test a quicker naturally aspirated, rear-drive
production car to 60 mph, price be damned. The C8 did great in the quarter
mile, too, covering 1,320 feet in 11.1 seconds at 123.2 mph. That beats the
direct competitor Porsche 911 Carrera S by 0.1 second. A win, however, is a
win; the Corvette is quicker than the Porsche.
Braking from
60 mph takes place in 97 feet, which is world class. The C8's figure-eight time
of 23.3 seconds is quick but behind the aforementioned Porsche (22.7 seconds)
and stuff like the Chevy Camaro SS 1LE (22.9 seconds). I'll go ahead
and blame the awkward brake-by-wire system. We all agreed there's more work to
do here. "It's near-impossible to accurately modulate the braking effort
in Track mode, the system defaulting to instant-on ABS intervention at pedal
speeds and weights a steel-braked 911 would shrug off," MacKenzie said.
But those are modest
complaints. The C8 wins our top award on the strength of how it drives.
"Phenomenal performance," news editor Alex Nishimoto said. He's
right. While conducting limit testing of the entire field at the Hyundai Motor
Group California Proving Ground, I knew the Corvette deserved to be a
finalist—but my mind remained open to other vehicles taking the top spot.
It was after
cruising the twists and turns of Cameron Road on our finalist loop near
Tehachapi that I became convinced the mid-engine Corvette had to be our winner.
"It's so easy to drive," editor-in-chief Ed Loh said. That's perhaps
the No. 1 big change from behind the wheel of the C8 compared to the C7. You
can just go for it and attack a road with abandon. I loved how potent, aggressive,
and in control I felt. Total confidence.
Many judges
mentioned that there's a touch of understeer. Note, I did not say complained about
said phenomenon, just mentioned that it's there. Loh noted that dialing in some
understeer is a "sensible strategy," as this will be many owners'
first time driving a mid-engine car, and understeer keeps the nose pointing in
a straight line when you push the throttle farther than your skills allow. Let
me stress that we're talking a skosh, a pinch, a tiny amount of understeer. We're
just saying the car isn't tail happy. "The genius of this Corvette is it
feels benign to beginners," MacKenzie said, "but it's not boring for
experts."
As a group of
experts, we collectively loved driving the thing. "The sound is just
thrilling when you accelerate, punctuating each shift change, sounding and
feeling fabulous," Priddle said. Theodore agreed: "The C8 is very
easy to drive, with very high capabilities that most owners will not
reach." Nishimoto added, "Happiness is having a small-block V-8 rumbling
behind you." Rechtin called the C8 "something that can be driven very
fast, all day, but you emerge completely rested and relaxed." And MotorTrend
en Español managing editor Miguel Cortina said, "Finally, a Corvette
that I enjoy driving."
To become
a MotorTrend Car of the Year, you have to punch hard against our six
key criteria. To quickly break it down, the new Corvette fares worst in terms
of advancement of design. However, as a car's interior is included in this
metric, the C8 did OK.
The 2020 Corvette's engineering
excellence is through the removable roof; it features world-class
performance combined with shockingly good ride comfort and noise levels.
Chevy's top dog also scores big in terms of performance of intended
function, assuming that intended function is to be a daily-driven supercar.
Safety is
trickier with the Corvette, as neither IIHS nor NHTSA have or will crash-test
it, but based on safety scores for GM's other recent offerings, we'll give
Chevrolet the benefit of the doubt here. As for efficiency, the
small-block has cylinder deactivation to loaf along while powered by just four
cylinders.
Value is
where the C8 goes off the charts. Why would you buy a BMW M4 for the
same money? Why would you spend half again as much for an equivalent 911?
Besides a badge, what does a Ferrari give you? And just wait until the more
powerful Corvette iterations show up.
Few cars
change the automotive landscape, forcing other manufacturers to react, as the
status quo will no longer do. It's déjà vu all over again, again, folks. Chevy
is selling a supercar for sports car prices. As I told a wealthy supercar
collector friend of mine, "If I were you, I'd buy three." Or as
MacKenzie put it, "Hallelujah! A real, honest-to-god, mid-engine supercar
for the price of a Corvette." Great job, Chevrolet.Chevrolet Corvette C8 2020, Estados Unidos
Chevrolet Corvette C8 2020, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
High
expectations are a bitch. Whether you're anticipating Adele's next album, Ron
Howard's next movie, or Christian Yelich's next at-bat, it's only human to feel
a little deflated if it doesn't turn out just the way you'd dreamed it would.
And, so, the deflation potential is high with the new mid-engined 2020 Chevrolet Corvette.
From the
moment that rumors surfaced that the engine in the next C8-generation Corvette might
move behind the seats, the presumption that the car would be a breakthrough, a
revelation, and a revolution has followed it like a moon shadow. Now it's here.
And it does look more like a Ferrari than a Corvette, with the same
cabin-forward proportions as every hyperfast, megadollar exotic on the market.
And we've driven it extensively. So, has Chevrolet built a
supercar for the masses—an American Ferrari—or simply a better Corvette? The
answer is yes—but with an asterisk. It's complicated.
We did our
judging by spending a week in a C8 equipped with the $5000 track-capable Z51
Performance package and optional FE4 magnetorheological dampers (an additional $1895),
the hottest version available at launch. We drove it on the road. We
track-tested it to scrutinize its performance capabilities. And we timed laps at
Grattan Raceway outside of Grand Rapids, Michigan, in both the
C8 and a similarly equipped C7-gen Z51 Vette to see whether the mid-engine
model's claimed handling advantage over its front-engine predecessor is real.
After all that
poking and prodding, we have concluded that the new C8 is spectacular, amazing,
and supremely capable. Maybe even revolutionary. And we've also come to the
realization that, despite its long list of compelling attributes, it's still
not quite everything we had hoped it would be. Like we said, it's complicated.
Whatever the
world's expectations for the C8, Chevy had its own. Yes, the company wanted to
appeal to younger buyers who once tacked posters of Lamborghini Countachs to
their bedroom walls. But the Corvette, once again called the Stingray, was
designed to occupy the same place in the market as before. Some 50 percent of
Corvette buyers purchase the entry-level model, which is why a base C8 goes for
just $59,995—hundreds of thousands less than the McLarens, Ferraris, and
Lamborghinis it resembles. Nor did the Corvette team want to shock its loyal
owners with a car so alien that they couldn't abide it. "First we designed
a mid-engine car," a Corvette team insider told us. "Then we had to
turn it into a Corvette." That's the framework within which to judge the
new C8.
Untangling our
feelings about the C8 Stingray starts with examining its performance, which
definitely lives up to expectations. With 60.6 percent of its mass over the
rear tires—the C7 Stingray had a roughly 50/50 front-to-rear weight
distribution—the C8 is ferocious off the line. Note that our heavily optioned
test car weighed 3647 pounds, 195 more than a 2019 C7 Z51 we tested. With the
dual-mode performance exhaust that's included in the Z51 package, the 6.2-liter
LT2 V-8 in the C8's tail makes 495 horsepower (base cars without that exhaust
make 490). That's up 35 ponies from the C7 Z51's engine, which keeps the
pounds-per-horsepower ratios of the two cars virtually equal.
Aided by its
quick-shifting eight-speed dual-clutch automatic—the only
transmission available—and a well-calibrated launch-control system,
the C8 rips off zero-to-60-mph runs in 2.8 seconds. That's 1.1 seconds quicker
than the last C7 Z51 we tested with a manual transmission. The C8 even betters
the zero-to-60-mph runs of the quickest 650-hp C7 Z06 and
755-hp C7 ZR1 that
we've strapped our test gear to, both of which lose the struggle with grip in
low gears. Yes, they are traveling faster than the new Vette by the end of the
quarter-mile, which the C8 does in 11.2 seconds at 122 mph, but the point is
made: The mid-engine configuration pays off from a standing start.
The C8 stopped
from 70 mph in 149 feet and hung on to the skidpad at 1.03 g with quite a bit
more understeer than we were expecting, considering our experiences on the
road. Neither of those chassis metrics are improvements over the C7, which
stopped in 139 feet and circled the skidpad at 1.06 g. Partial blame can be
cast at the C8's weight gain. However, the full extent of the latest Corvette's
handling superiority would play out during hot lapping at the racetrack.
While the C8's
performance places it within the bounds of the supercar class, character
matters as much as capability. It's here where your expectations will affect
how you feel about the C8. Make no mistake, if you want to haul ass down a
writhing piece of asphalt, this car will do it at astounding velocities, with a
viselike grip on the pavement and the haughty assuredness of a car born to the
task. There are six driving modes, and the FE4 damper package also includes the
Performance Traction Management system for fine-tuning the car's stability
control for track use. Switch into any of the more aggressive settings with the
awkward-to-use dial on the center console, punch the push-button shifter into
manual mode, and hang on. The faster you go, the better the C8 feels. The
steering cuts like a race car's, and the cornering limits are virtually out of
reach on the street—though steering feel and feedback aren't as communicative
as those from a Porsche 911 or
a McLaren 720S. Boiling out
of corners on full throttle, the big V-8 thunders like a NASCAR engine, and the
dual-clutch automatic delivers crisp shifts when you pull the paddles on the
back of the steering wheel.
Most of the
time, you won't be blazing twisty roads like a four-wheeled flamethrower; you'll
be wanting a car that's a little more Zen. Bimodal, everyday usability has long
been a Corvette trait, and the C8 continues that tradition. In Tour mode, it
transmogrifies into a laid-back daily driver, with a ride smoother than many
sports sedan's, steering lighter than a Malibu's, and an engine note that's
barely a murmur. The transmission eases through its eight gears unnoticed,
though it can be a bit lazy to downshift if you stab the throttle. Extensive
acoustic insulation has made the C8 not only quieter by three decibels at 70
mph than the C7, but just plain quiet. This kind of dynamic bandwidth is almost
unheard of in the mid-engine exotic realm.
There are
three seat options in the C8: GT1, GT2 (included in the 3LT trim), and the more
aggressive Competition Sport buckets. The GT2 chairs in our test car were soft
in the right places yet wonderfully supportive for amped-up cornering. This is
a car you can drive anytime, anywhere—including clear across the
country—without it tiring you out. Plus, it has useful space in
the front and rear cargo holds. So, go ahead, take it to the
supermarket.
But normal
driving also is where the C8 gets tripped up by elevated expectations. More
than a few of us were hoping for more character, more drama, and more
personality when we weren't hammering it. Ferraris and Lamborghinis snarl at
you like caged tigers even when you're just moseying through downtown. The
steering of Porsches and McLarens is more vivid than the Corvette's at low
speeds. We sometimes wished the new Stingray felt a little louder and brasher,
a bit more like the C7. Can a car that looks this angry actually be too
refined? That's where the asterisk comes in.
We have few
reservations about the new Stingray's interior, though. Our car, a
well-equipped example with the $11,950 3LT package, boasted supple, tautly sewn
leather on most of its interior surfaces, plus extras such as the $1500
carbon-fiber trim. You sit farther forward compared with the seating position
in the C7, though the view over the
deep instrument panel isn't as panoramic as it is in some other
mid-engine cars. The wall-like cabin divider that houses the climate controls
looks obtrusive but isn't. The odd squared-off steering wheel is, surprisingly,
as easy to use as a circular one, and it provides a clear view of the
programmable digital gauge cluster. The steering-column stalks are a bit of a
reach, and the glare on the rear glass sometimes hides what's behind you. The
electronic rearview mirror camera that's standard on 2LT and 3LT trims solves
this problem, though; it provides an unobstructed view of anything behind you.
Overall, this is by far the best Corvette interior ever.
The C8 also is
the most impressive Corvette ever. Deleting all the fancy gear on our test
car—it had all manner of extras that didn't make it drive better, including a
$1495 front-end lift mechanism to clear steep driveways and $995 worth of
carbon-fiber engine-compartment garnish—wouldn't change how we feel about it.
But it would drop the price considerably. For a base car with the Z51 package
and FE4 dampers, you're looking at only $66,890. This is nothing less than the
democratization of the exotic car.
And consider
this: The C8 Stingray is but the opening
salvo in Chevy's supercar revolution. It's a known secret that
several hotter C8s will soon follow, powered by high-revving, DOHC 32-valve
flat-plane-crank V-8s starting at 600-plus horsepower and ranging up to a
hybrid with nearly 1000 ponies. Those versions likely will deliver all the
snarl anyone could want.
That's the
future. This is now, and it's clear that the new C8 isn't just a better
Corvette, but a supercar for the rest of us—imperfections be damned. You'll
just have to readjust your expectations to suit.
Chevrolet Corvette C8, Primeiras Unidades a Venda no Brasil - Artigo
Chevrolet Corvette C8, Primeiras Unidades a Venda no Brasil - Artigo
Artigo
O novo
Chevrolet Corvette chegará ao Brasil um mês após as primeiras entregas do
modelo nos Estados Unidos.
A loja Direct
Imports, de São Paulo, receberá um lote de 20 unidades do novo Corvette
C8 em março deste ano. Segundo Daniel Valerio, CEO da empresa, 14 veículos
já estão vendidos pelo preço de R$ 600 mil cada um.
"O carro
tem sido muito procurado mesmo neste cenário de dólar em alta", afirmou o
executivo em comunicado. A Direct informa que após esse pacote inicial só
conseguirá trazer mais unidades do modelo em 2021. O motivo? A alta
demanda do esportivo nos Estados Unidos.
A oitava
geração do Corvette é a primeira a usar um motor central-traseiro,
mesma disposição usada em modelos de Ferrari, Lamborghini e Audi.
No GM o V8 6.2 aspirado pode ultrapassar os 500 cv quando equipado com
escapamentos esportivos opcionais.
Apesar da alta
demanda, a GM segue sem interesse em importar oficialmente o modelo
para o Brasil. Por aqui a marca tem como único esportivo o Camaro, vendido nas
versões cupê e conversível a partir de R$ 333 mil.Como Surgiu o "Paulistanês", o Sotaque Falado nas Ruas de São Paulo - Artigo
Como Surgiu o "Paulistanês", o Sotaque Falado nas Ruas de São Paulo - Artigo
Artigo
"Um
chopis e dois pastel", "choveindo", que também pode soar como
chovennndo", "orra meu" e "véio" são expressões ou
pronúncias que tornam possíveis, para muita gente, a identificação do falante
como nativo da cidade de São Paulo.
É o
"dialeto" ou sotaque paulistano, tão diferente de outros, mas tão
próprio e característico de quem o expressa, como o chiado o é para os
cariocas. Ele se formou ao longo dos 466 anos da cidade, completados no dia 25
de janeiro de 2020.
Cada modo de
falar é próprio de uma comunidade, seja um bairro, uma cidade, um estado ou
país — basta ver as diferenças entre o português falado no Brasil e o de
Portugal.
O
desenvolvimento do "paulistanês" é resultado da história da própria
cidade.
No princípio
eram os índios, com suas dezenas de línguas — cerca de 380 em todo país, na
época do descobrimento — principalmente o tupi ou tupi antigo, falado pelas
tribos de povos dessa etnia, que habitavam a maior parte do litoral do Brasil
no século 16, aí incluído o Planalto de Piratininga, onde está assentada a
cidade de São Paulo. Entre elas estavam os tupinambás, tupiniquins, caetés,
tamoios, potiguaras e tabajaras.
Depois vieram
os colonizadores portugueses, de várias partes de Portugal, cada uma com seu
linguajar e sua pronúncia. Mais tarde chegaram os escravos africanos e suas
variadas línguas e, mais recentemente, os imigrantes de diversos países, com
destaque para os italianos.
"O
sotaque da cidade de São Paulo é uma grande mistura", diz o músico e
pesquisador Ivan Vilela, da Faculdade de Música, da Escola de Comunicações e
Artes, da Universidade de são Paulo (ECA-USP). "Inicialmente, até o final
do século 19, era o caipira, que ainda está presente em todo o interior do
estado, sul de Minas Geras e Triângulo Mineiro, que foi o eixo de difusão da
cultura bandeirante."
De acordo com
ele, autor do livro Cantando a Própria História: Música Caipira e
Enraizamento, o "paulistanês" começa a receber uma série de injeções
linguísticas a partir dessa época.
"Para se
ter uma ideia, em 1883 o censo da população da cidade mostrou um número maior
de italianos do que de brasileiros", diz. "Eles deixaram uma marca
muito forte no sotaque paulistano, que pode ser visto na obra de Juó Bananère
[pseudônimo usado pelo escritor e poeta brasileiro Alexandre Ribeiro Marcondes
Machado para criar obras literárias usando o modo de falar da colônia italiana
de São Paulo na primeira metade do século 20] e quando se ouve Adoniran
Barbosa."
Vilela explica
ainda que o sotaque caipira foi "expulso" da cidade. "Num
processo de modernização, São Paulo começou a banir todos esses traços
arcaicos, dentre eles a própria 'língua' caipira", diz.
"Paralelamente
a isso, houve a proclamação da República, com todo seu ideário positivista, que
deu suporte a ela e interferiu na relação da população com a cultura popular
que a cercava. Começou a haver uma prevalência do saber erudito sobre o
popular."
Depois
começaram a chegar outras levas de imigrantes, como japoneses, espanhóis e
libaneses. A consequência foi que em cada canto da cidade surgiu uma marca
característica.
"Na zona
sul, na região de Santo Amaro, por exemplo, predomina o sotaque nordestino. Na
zona norte a influência já é mais portuguesa", afirma Vilela.
Além disso, o
êxodo rural em direção à capital, ocorrido a partir de 1920, como a derrocada
da cultura do café, trouxe de volta o falar caipira para a cidade de São Paulo,
segundo ele.
A historiadora
e linguista Lívia Oushiro, da Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp), tem
outra explicação para a presença, até hoje, do sotaque caipira na capital.
"É
difícil determinar se ele 'ressurgiu' na periferia ou se nunca desapareceu da
cidade", diz. "Acho a segunda hipótese mais provável. Mas, sem
dúvida, a sua presença nas periferias tem a ver com o grande influxo de migrantes
do interior à cidade de São Paulo ao longo da segunda metade do século
20."
Ela explica
que no Brasil, o grande diferenciador de sotaques é a pronúncia da letra
"R", principalmente quando em final de sílaba, em palavras como
"porta" e "mulher".
"Na
capital paulista, há duas pronúncias principais para esse som: o chamado 'R
retroflexo', que é também conhecido como 'R caipira' e que está bastante
presente na fala dos moradores de periferia [pense, por exemplo, num rapper
falando 'certo, mano!']", explica. "A outra é o chamado 'R tepe', que
é usado principalmente nas regiões centrais da cidade."
Esse R soa
como na palavra "pirata", diferentemente do R retroflexo, que é usado
em Piracicaba, por exemplo, como em "porrrta".
"O
primeiro é considerado um traço mais 'central' geograficamente, e pode ter
conotações de classe (mais alta) e as concomitantes associações de
formalidade", diz o linguista Thomas Daniel Finbow, do Departamento de
Linguística, da Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, da USP.
"O retroflexo, por sua vez, é visto como mais periférico e informal."
Uma outra característica
facilmente reconhecível do "paulistanês" é o jeito de pronunciar as
sílabas "ti" e "di" — que soam como "tchi" e
"dgi" —, de acordo com Lívia, que é autora da tese de doutorado sobre
o tema.
Ela lembra
ainda da ditongação (união, em uma mesma sílaba, de uma vogal silábica e uma
semivogal) do "en" em palavras como "fazenda" e
"entendendo". "Elas acabam sendo pronunciadas como
'fazeinda" e 'enteindeindo'."
São Paulo tem
também vocábulos próprios. O paulitano usa, por exemplo "'marmita',
'busão' e 'mexerica' em vez de 'quentinha', 'coletivo/ônibus',
'tangerina/bergamota' de outras regiões", afirma a linguista.
Se observar
direito, quem visita a cidade vai notar que em algumas regiões, principalmente
naquelas com maior número de descendentes de italianos, como os bairros da
Mooca e da Bela Vista (Bexiga), não se usa muito o plural, como em "os
carro vermelho".
Isso porque o
italiano não usa o "s" para formar o plural.
"No caso
do italiano, ele deriva do caso nominativo latino, cujo plural é formado pelo
uso, no final da palavra, de 'i', para o masculino, e de 'e', para o feminino,
e não do 's'", diz Manoel Mourivaldo Santiago-Almeida, doutor e pós-doutor
em Letras e professor titular da USP.
"O
português e o espanhol usam o "s", porque derivam do acusativo plural
latino, que já o tinha. Isso é um exemplo de como a gramática de um idioma
influencia outro."
Para Finbow,
apesar de em muitos casos fugir das normas cultas da língua portuguesa, não se
deve considerar o sotaque paulistano — ou qualquer sotaque — como
"errado". "Ele não deveria ser enxergado como uma série de
desvios da norma padrão, porque as raízes de alguns traços das variedades
paulistanas antecedem a formação de uma norma culta e são fundamentalmente
independentes dela", explica.
Rua General Carneiro, São Paulo, Brasil
Rua General Carneiro, São Paulo, Brasil
São Paulo - SP
Revista Life - Estados Unidos
Fotografia
Foto da subida da Rua General Carneiro. O Viaduto é da Rua Boa Vista. O Edifício ao fundo, parecido com o Edifício Altino Arantes, é o Edifício Azevedo Villares que fica na Rua do Tesouro com a XV de Novembro. À esquerda da foto fica o Pátio do Colégio.
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