Anonymous
6/23/2025, 9:02:25 PM
No.212047299
[Report]
Russian
6/23/2025, 9:02:40 PM
No.212047305
[Report]
She should stop being this cute
can someone explain to me what "Paulastinian" means ?
Is this word related to Sao Paolo ?
i only heard Faustian spirit coming from the book FAUST but what the hell is Paulistian???
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 9:06:31 PM
No.212047431
[Report]
Luv me some zillian culture
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 9:37:16 PM
No.212048414
[Report]
>>212048482
>>212048259
she looks horrible with this burnt skin color
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 9:44:53 PM
No.212048716
[Report]
>>212049129
nooooo bring pale angela back
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 9:57:09 PM
No.212049170
[Report]
>>212049129
yay <3
she's dressed like a sloot though
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 10:02:07 PM
No.212049341
[Report]
>>212049414
>>212049282
non-existent phenotype here
>>212047120 (OP)
Caipira culture, the culrure of Paulistânia.
>>212047336
The term Paulistânia was coined by Joaquim Ribeiro in his 1946 work "Folklore dos Bandeirantes," a neologism created "to designate the vital space of the ancient Paulistas," to be used from then on to refer to the region that, in his opinion, was "one of the fundamental cells in the territorial formation of Brazil." The author believed that, besides being practical, Paulistânia was a name that aligned with "the geographical and historical understanding of the region of bandeirismo." It is worth noting that 'paulista' does not only refer to someone born in São Paulo but to all caipiras, as for a long time what we now know as 'caipira' was also called paulista or vicentista until the mid-19th century. Paulista was anyone born in the entire territory of the old Captaincy of São Paulo. Consequently, it is evident that there are similarities in fields as diverse as the very concept of culture may encompass, whether in cuisine, clothing, or accent. It is clear that between someone from southern Minas Gerais, northern Paraná, Mato Grosso, for example, there is a cultural relationship. Denying this out of pure "state regionalism" is to deny our history, culture, and identity. Attributing culture, historiography, and tradition to states separately, as if they always had the same federalist dynamic for five centuries, is extremely ignorant. This only creates an artificial and shallow regionalism based on imaginary lines drawn by monarchs disconnected from the real dynamics of Brazilian colonization and does not reflect the complex reality of Brazilian culture.
>>212048259
It's not only São Paulo, but the whole region settled by Paulistas.
>>212048396
Paraná is Paulistânia.
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 10:46:46 PM
No.212050865
[Report]
>>212052430
>>212050653
fuck off baiano we have nothing in common with Sum Paulû
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 10:48:31 PM
No.212050917
[Report]
>>212052377
>>212050653
i just mean thats the capital of the paulistanians
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 11:12:24 PM
No.212051720
[Report]
>>212051936
>>212051648
thats not considered white in brazil
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 11:19:06 PM
No.212051957
[Report]
>>212052189
>>212047120 (OP)
Who the fuck is this Bob all these moids keep talking about
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 11:25:52 PM
No.212052189
[Report]
>>212052281
>>212051936
this looks like those slavic pastries with potato filling,
>>212051957 what do you call them?
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 11:28:20 PM
No.212052281
[Report]
>>212052189
Kikes, kikes that need to be pogromed like in the good old days
Anonymous
6/23/2025, 11:32:45 PM
No.212052430
[Report]
>>212050865
Paraná is an indivisible part of Paulistânia.
Paraná was one of the first territories conquered by the bandeirantes after the expedition that expelled the Spaniards and their Guarani allies from the then Gobernación del Guayrá led by Manuel Preto and Raposo Tavares. Paraná spent 225 years as part of São Paulo, being the last state to be dismembered from São Paulo, only gaining independence in 1853 as a punishment to São Paulo for its involvement in the revolts of 1842. Paraná was part of the Peabiru, one of the main routes of the bandeirantes. During this same period, the state's coastline also developed as a mining center for the caiçaras from São Vicente, with Paranaguá later becoming one São Paulo's main port.
With the defeat of the Paulistas in the War of the Emboabas and their subsequent expulsion from the central region of Minas Gerais, Paraná once again became a target for the bandeirantes, who at this point became tropeiros, so Campos Gerais and Curitiba experienced rapid settlement by colonists from Sorocaba. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the northern part of the state was colonized by cattle ranchers and their families from western São Paulo.
I'm not baiano btw, I belong to the Caipira race of Raposo Tavares, Anhanguera nad Fernão Dias.
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 12:11:04 AM
No.212053599
[Report]
Quiero sexo oral, anal y vaginal caliente y sudoroso con Angela.
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 12:30:36 AM
No.212054146
[Report]
>>212048396
Paraná is São Paulo`s backyard
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 1:47:40 AM
No.212055988
[Report]
>>212056025
new flavor of the month whore
which new flavor of the month whore will you guys shove in our faces come next month?
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 1:50:48 AM
No.212056063
[Report]
>>212056082
>>212056025
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
I CAN'T STOP LAUGHING
HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHABABBABABABABABAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHABAHAHABABAB
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 1:51:57 AM
No.212056082
[Report]
>>212056155
>>212056063
yea i really got you with that one
pretty good one aint it?
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 2:09:32 AM
No.212056421
[Report]
I think Brazilian culture SUCKS!
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 2:29:08 AM
No.212056750
[Report]
>>212056155
thanks ive improved a lot
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 4:37:22 AM
No.212058723
[Report]
Darcy Ribeiro, in his work O Povo Brasileiro, analyzes five regional-cultural identities
>Caipira
Region: Paulistâna.
Origins: bandeirante settlers, later Europeans.
Culture: Rural, agrarian lifestyle, subsistence farming and cattle ranching.
Strong oral tradition, folk tales, music (moda de viola), and festivals.
Resilient and deeply connected to the land.
Darcy Ribeiro’s View: it represents the rural peasantry formed in the expansion inland, marked by isolation and cultural preservation.
>Caboclo
Region: Amazon
Origins: Mix of Indigenous peoples with Portuguese and some African influences.
Culture: River-based and forest-dependent lifestyle
Rich mythology, herbal medicine, and crafts.
Darcy Ribeiro’s View: it embodies the adaptation of Indigenous to colonial pressures
>Gaúcho
Region: Pampas of Rio Grande do Sul.
Origins: Mix of Spanish/Portuguese settlers, Indigenous, and later Europeans
Culture:
Cattle-ranching, horsemanship.
Strong regional identity.
Historically linked to the Farroupilha movement.
Darcy Ribeiro’s View: it represents a frontier culture, shaped by war, cattle economy, and a sense of regional pride.
>Sertanejo
Region: Northeastern dry hinterland.
Origins: Mix of Portuguese, Indigenous, and African influences in a harsh, semi-arid environment.
Culture: Resilient, adapted to droughts.
Cordel literature, forró music, and vaqueiro (rancher) traditions.
Deep religious (folk Catholicism) and storytelling.
Darcy Ribeiro’s View: The sertanejo is shaped by struggle, endurance, and a deep connection to the land despite its brutality.
>Fluminense
Region: Rio de Janeiro, Espírito Santo
Origins: Urban mix of Portuguese, African (strong Yoruba influence).
Culture: Cosmopolitan, samba, Carnival, and beach culture.
Carioca identity (informal, playful).
Historically Brazil’s political and cultural capital (until 1960).
Darcy Ribeiro’s View: The fluminense represents the urban, mestizo Brazil, creative, and shaped by slavery, and immigration.
Anonymous
6/24/2025, 5:33:09 AM
No.212059558
[Report]
>>212059488
“Homme du S. Paulo” Jean-Baptiste Debret, 1827