Abstract

Affirmative actions in Brazil create access to people that, in other times, could not imagine themselves studying at public universities. People from rural areas bring with themselves a sociolinguistic profile that conflicts with the academic culture of the university. Faced with this challenge, I present the result of a survey on socioliteracy, which was carried out in the Rural Education Course (LEdoC) at Faculdade UnB, Planaltina, from 2013 to 2019. This paper aims to examine socioliteracy practices in essays which integrate knowledge, theoretical-methodological aspects of sociolinguistics, multiple literacies, ethnographies, actions, and conflicts of peasant people.

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