Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism

The present work aims to analyze, from the point of view of decolonial feminism, and in an incipient way, the struggle of quilombola women for the recognition of their ancestral territories. Decolonial feminism, which can also be seen as one of the currents of subaltern feminism, arose from the stu...

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Main Authors: Thaisa Maira Rodrigues Held, Isadora Golim Campos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2022-08-01
Series:Revista Katálysis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/katalysis/article/view/86195
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author Thaisa Maira Rodrigues Held
Isadora Golim Campos
author_facet Thaisa Maira Rodrigues Held
Isadora Golim Campos
author_sort Thaisa Maira Rodrigues Held
collection DOAJ
description The present work aims to analyze, from the point of view of decolonial feminism, and in an incipient way, the struggle of quilombola women for the recognition of their ancestral territories. Decolonial feminism, which can also be seen as one of the currents of subaltern feminism, arose from the study of gender coloniality by Maria Lugones, who, through the idea of coloniality of power developed by Aníbal Quijano, deepened the debate by understanding that his concept was insufficient to understand the gender issue since it was seen from a Eurocentric and heteronormative perspective. Lugones then deepened the theme and made an intersection between race, gender, and coloniality. Decolonial feminism manifests itself in the Latin American context, giving visibility to its subaltern representations, to Latin American, Afro-descendant, mestizo, and indigenous women, and in this scenario quilombola women are also included. In Brazil, decolonial theories and practices are drawn from theoretical discussions held by more classical theorists, such as Lélia Gonzalez and Sueli Carneiro, and contemporary ones, such as Carla Akotirene, to address issues that are closer to the reality of Brazilian women. The phenomena that support the theories are glimpsed in the daily struggles of black women, especially quilombolas, for the right to the recognition of their territories - denied by the State and which potentiates the various forms of violence, including gender violence. These practices are carried out by quilombola leaders in the private and public contexts and correspond to the notion of female empowerment linked to the collective context. For the analysis of the application of the theories and phenomena, the deductive method was used and as methodological procedures, the literature review and the analysis of available data and documents. We conclude that decolonial feminism should increasingly observe more the phenomena than the theories and that the feminine resistances in and through the quilombola territory go through struggles for the recognition of gender identities to mitigate the overlapping violence.
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spelling doaj.art-e341a77fdb0c4df1a26e668983cf6a8c2023-02-13T11:52:57ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaRevista Katálysis1414-49801982-02592022-08-0125310.1590/1982-0259.2022.e86195Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminismThaisa Maira Rodrigues Held0Isadora Golim Campos1Universidade Federal da Grande Dourado (UFGD)Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados The present work aims to analyze, from the point of view of decolonial feminism, and in an incipient way, the struggle of quilombola women for the recognition of their ancestral territories. Decolonial feminism, which can also be seen as one of the currents of subaltern feminism, arose from the study of gender coloniality by Maria Lugones, who, through the idea of coloniality of power developed by Aníbal Quijano, deepened the debate by understanding that his concept was insufficient to understand the gender issue since it was seen from a Eurocentric and heteronormative perspective. Lugones then deepened the theme and made an intersection between race, gender, and coloniality. Decolonial feminism manifests itself in the Latin American context, giving visibility to its subaltern representations, to Latin American, Afro-descendant, mestizo, and indigenous women, and in this scenario quilombola women are also included. In Brazil, decolonial theories and practices are drawn from theoretical discussions held by more classical theorists, such as Lélia Gonzalez and Sueli Carneiro, and contemporary ones, such as Carla Akotirene, to address issues that are closer to the reality of Brazilian women. The phenomena that support the theories are glimpsed in the daily struggles of black women, especially quilombolas, for the right to the recognition of their territories - denied by the State and which potentiates the various forms of violence, including gender violence. These practices are carried out by quilombola leaders in the private and public contexts and correspond to the notion of female empowerment linked to the collective context. For the analysis of the application of the theories and phenomena, the deductive method was used and as methodological procedures, the literature review and the analysis of available data and documents. We conclude that decolonial feminism should increasingly observe more the phenomena than the theories and that the feminine resistances in and through the quilombola territory go through struggles for the recognition of gender identities to mitigate the overlapping violence. https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/katalysis/article/view/86195Decolonial feminism; Quilombola women; Territory; Resistance.
spellingShingle Thaisa Maira Rodrigues Held
Isadora Golim Campos
Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
Revista Katálysis
Decolonial feminism; Quilombola women; Territory; Resistance.
title Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
title_full Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
title_fullStr Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
title_full_unstemmed Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
title_short Quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
title_sort quilombola women and the struggle for territory from the perspective of decolonial feminism
topic Decolonial feminism; Quilombola women; Territory; Resistance.
url https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/katalysis/article/view/86195
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