De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2021
Autor(a) principal: Pâmela Guimarães da Silva
Orientador(a): Não Informado pela instituição
Banca de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: por
Instituição de defesa: Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Não Informado pela instituição
Departamento: Não Informado pela instituição
País: Não Informado pela instituição
Link de acesso: https://hdl.handle.net/1843/40832
Resumo: The purpose of this doctoral thesis is to apprehend the arrangements created and the interactional strategies used by black women in their political insurgencies to transform the social place of their peers. Therefore, we are mainly affiliated with Sueli Carneiro theory (2005) that Brazilian society is structured under the raciality device, which, ultimately, has genocide and black epistemicide as objectives. However, we also observe that, continuously, black subjects rearrange the elements that make up the device and create spaces of resistance to its effects. Especially black women. With that in mind, we undertake a historical and analytical retreat in order to identify the communicational practices that black women have been undertaking to transform this reality that inscribes black subjects under the sign of death (factual and symbolic). Based on a methodology that we call the arc of life — which, inspired by the stylistic resource of the writer Conceição Evaristo in her work Olhos d'água, consists of presenting a significant group of women, with multiple characteristics and experiences, but which if observed together, could form an arc of life any black woman — we selected as our corpus: the column Negra, written by Lélia Gonzalez (1980); the column Mulher Negra e Pequim 95 - da Informação à Ação written by members of the Geledés Institute (1990); the column Opinião of Correio Braziliense newspaper, reproduced in Portal Geledés (2000), written by Sueli Carneiro; the opinion articles by Djamila Ribeiro in Blogueiras Negras (2010) and the article Últimas palavras by Marielle Franco (2018). Our approach to this material revealed that these women needed and continually need to destabilize the raciality device, which is manifested through a certain discursive authorization that creates legibilities, while imprisoning them in the social place of silencing. To do so, they create symbolic territories (online and offline), in which: 1) they define and evaluate themselves; 2) expose the interconnected nature of the oppressions that affect them and 3) value the culture itself. In other words, they carry out procedures of subjectivation and political emancipation — a recognition of themselves, different from the regulations of the raciality device. As all these dimensions of subjectivation and emancipation take race as a reference, but produce interactions whose meanings are different from those produced by the raciality device, our hypothesis is that these women constantly try to modify the arrangement of the elements that make up the device of raciality, so that they position themselves under an intersectional perspective and the interactions that occur in their environment no longer produce annihilation. It is a continuous attempt to engender in brazilian society an intersectional dispositional arrangement (BRAGA, 2018, 2020) of resistance to the racial device that will shape and guide interactions. A kind of against-device that manifests itself: with the entry into the order of discourse as columnists, in the organization and publication of their own demands, in the rescue and publication of their own history, in the exposure of oppressive social engineering, in the appreciation of their own culture, in the act of self-defining and self-evaluating.
id UFMG_291b8a4ae2d2fc29efd8a35f0c6ad3c3
oai_identifier_str oai:repositorio.ufmg.br:1843/40832
network_acronym_str UFMG
network_name_str Repositório Institucional da UFMG
repository_id_str
spelling 2022-04-06T19:20:51Z2025-09-09T01:17:45Z2022-04-06T19:20:51Z2021-10-28https://hdl.handle.net/1843/40832The purpose of this doctoral thesis is to apprehend the arrangements created and the interactional strategies used by black women in their political insurgencies to transform the social place of their peers. Therefore, we are mainly affiliated with Sueli Carneiro theory (2005) that Brazilian society is structured under the raciality device, which, ultimately, has genocide and black epistemicide as objectives. However, we also observe that, continuously, black subjects rearrange the elements that make up the device and create spaces of resistance to its effects. Especially black women. With that in mind, we undertake a historical and analytical retreat in order to identify the communicational practices that black women have been undertaking to transform this reality that inscribes black subjects under the sign of death (factual and symbolic). Based on a methodology that we call the arc of life — which, inspired by the stylistic resource of the writer Conceição Evaristo in her work Olhos d'água, consists of presenting a significant group of women, with multiple characteristics and experiences, but which if observed together, could form an arc of life any black woman — we selected as our corpus: the column Negra, written by Lélia Gonzalez (1980); the column Mulher Negra e Pequim 95 - da Informação à Ação written by members of the Geledés Institute (1990); the column Opinião of Correio Braziliense newspaper, reproduced in Portal Geledés (2000), written by Sueli Carneiro; the opinion articles by Djamila Ribeiro in Blogueiras Negras (2010) and the article Últimas palavras by Marielle Franco (2018). Our approach to this material revealed that these women needed and continually need to destabilize the raciality device, which is manifested through a certain discursive authorization that creates legibilities, while imprisoning them in the social place of silencing. To do so, they create symbolic territories (online and offline), in which: 1) they define and evaluate themselves; 2) expose the interconnected nature of the oppressions that affect them and 3) value the culture itself. In other words, they carry out procedures of subjectivation and political emancipation — a recognition of themselves, different from the regulations of the raciality device. As all these dimensions of subjectivation and emancipation take race as a reference, but produce interactions whose meanings are different from those produced by the raciality device, our hypothesis is that these women constantly try to modify the arrangement of the elements that make up the device of raciality, so that they position themselves under an intersectional perspective and the interactions that occur in their environment no longer produce annihilation. It is a continuous attempt to engender in brazilian society an intersectional dispositional arrangement (BRAGA, 2018, 2020) of resistance to the racial device that will shape and guide interactions. A kind of against-device that manifests itself: with the entry into the order of discourse as columnists, in the organization and publication of their own demands, in the rescue and publication of their own history, in the exposure of oppressive social engineering, in the appreciation of their own culture, in the act of self-defining and self-evaluating.porUniversidade Federal de Minas Geraishttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pt/info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessMulheres negrasArranjos disposicionaisInterseccionalidadeResistênciaComunicaçãoDe Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistênciainfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisPâmela Guimarães da Silvareponame:Repositório Institucional da UFMGinstname:Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)instacron:UFMGhttp://lattes.cnpq.br/2733654286288970Ângela Cristina Salgueiro Marqueshttp://lattes.cnpq.br/5038152185134297Regiane Lucas de Oliveira GarcêzRosane da Silva BorgesMaria Gislene Carvalho FonsecaLuciana de OliveiraFernanda Ariane CarreraO objetivo desta tese de doutoramento é apreender quais são os arranjos criados e as estratégias interacionais usadas por mulheres negras em suas insurgências políticas para transformar o lugar social de seus pares. Para entender esse contexto que precisa ser modificado, filiamo-nos, principalmente, à abordagem de Sueli Carneiro (2005) de que a sociedade brasileira está estruturada sob o dispositivo de racialidade que, em última instância, tem como objetivos o genocídio e o epistemicídio negro. Porém, observamos também que, continuamente, os sujeitos negros rearranjam os elementos que compõem o dispositivo e criam espaços de resistência aos seus efeitos. Especialmente, mulheres negras. Com isso mente, empreendemos um recuo histórico e analítico a fim de identificar as práticas comunicacionais que mulheres negras vêm empreendendo para transformar essa realidade que inscreve os sujeitos negros sob o signo da morte (factual e simbólica), mas que também lhes oferece oportunidades de desvio. Para selecionar as práticas comunicacionais que seriam analisadas, elaboramos uma metodologia que nomeamos como arco da vida — que, inspirada no recurso estilístico da escritora Conceição Evaristo em sua obra Olhos d’água, consiste em apresentar um significativo conjunto de mulheres negras, com características e experiências múltiplas, mas que se observadas conjuntamente, poderiam formar um arco da vida de qualquer mulher negra. Assim compõem o nosso corpus: a coluna Negra, escrita por Lélia Gonzalez (1980); a coluna Mulher Negra e Pequim 95 - da Informação à Ação escrita por integrantes do Instituto Geledés (1990); a Coluna Opinião do Jornal Correio Braziliense, reproduzida no Portal Geledés (2000), escrita por Sueli Carneiro; os artigos de opinião de Djamila Ribeiro no Blogueiras Negras (2010) e o artigo Últimas Palavras de Marielle Franco (2018). Nossa aproximação desse material revelou que essas mulheres precisaram e precisam continuamente desestabilizar o dispositivo de racialidade, que se manifesta através em certa autorização discursiva que cria legibilidades, ao mesmo tempo que tenta as aprisionar no lugar social do silenciamento. Para tanto, elas criam territórios simbólicos (online e offline), nos quais: 1) se autodefinem e se autoavaliam; 2) expõem a natureza interligada das opressões que as atingem e 3) valorizam a própria cultura. Ou seja, elas realizam procedimentos de subjetivação e emancipação política — um reconhecimento de si por si, diferente das regulações do dispositivo de racialidade. Como todas essas dimensões de subjetivação e emancipação tomam a raça como referência, mas produzem interações cujos sentidos são diferentes daqueles produzidos pelo dispositivo de racialidade, nossa hipótese é a de que essas mulheres, constantemente, tentam modificar o arranjo dos elementos que compõem o dispositivo de racialidade, para que eles se posicionem sob uma ótica interseccional e as interações que ocorram em sua ambiência produzam não mais o aniquilamento. Trata-se de uma continua tentativa de engendrar na sociedade brasileira um arranjo disposicional (BRAGA, 2018, 2020) interseccional de resistência que tensiona o dispositivo racial que vai modelar e orientar as interações. Uma espécie de contra-dispositivo que se manifesta: com o ingresso na ordem do discurso como colunistas, na organização e publicação das próprias demandas, no resgate e na publicação da própria história, na exposição das engenharias sociais opressivas, na valorização da própria cultura, no ato de se autodefinir e se autoavaliar.BrasilFAF - DEPARTAMENTO DE COMUNICAÇÃO SOCIALPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Comunicação SocialUFMGORIGINALTESE.pdfapplication/pdf18608744https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/cbc4edaf-395b-4c2c-9acc-eaa971f8e8af/downloadd7daf81a43b5ed9e67988934e836bc7bMD51trueAnonymousREADCC-LICENSElicense_rdfapplication/octet-stream811https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/36b5a34b-c0b0-431c-be0c-c6e166685ad4/downloadcfd6801dba008cb6adbd9838b81582abMD52falseAnonymousREADLICENSElicense.txttext/plain2118https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/2c91791f-4633-44be-8bd6-a09bcd53ea37/downloadcda590c95a0b51b4d15f60c9642ca272MD53falseAnonymousREAD1843/408322025-09-08 22:17:45.897http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pt/Acesso Abertoopen.accessoai:repositorio.ufmg.br:1843/40832https://repositorio.ufmg.br/Repositório InstitucionalPUBhttps://repositorio.ufmg.br/oairepositorio@ufmg.bropendoar:2025-09-09T01:17:45Repositório Institucional da UFMG - Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)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
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
title De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
spellingShingle De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
Pâmela Guimarães da Silva
Mulheres negras
Arranjos disposicionais
Interseccionalidade
Resistência
Comunicação
title_short De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
title_full De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
title_fullStr De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
title_full_unstemmed De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
title_sort De Lélia Gonzalez a Marielle Franco : mulheres negras e seus processos comunicacionais interseccionais de resistência
author Pâmela Guimarães da Silva
author_facet Pâmela Guimarães da Silva
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Pâmela Guimarães da Silva
dc.subject.other.none.fl_str_mv Mulheres negras
Arranjos disposicionais
Interseccionalidade
Resistência
Comunicação
topic Mulheres negras
Arranjos disposicionais
Interseccionalidade
Resistência
Comunicação
description The purpose of this doctoral thesis is to apprehend the arrangements created and the interactional strategies used by black women in their political insurgencies to transform the social place of their peers. Therefore, we are mainly affiliated with Sueli Carneiro theory (2005) that Brazilian society is structured under the raciality device, which, ultimately, has genocide and black epistemicide as objectives. However, we also observe that, continuously, black subjects rearrange the elements that make up the device and create spaces of resistance to its effects. Especially black women. With that in mind, we undertake a historical and analytical retreat in order to identify the communicational practices that black women have been undertaking to transform this reality that inscribes black subjects under the sign of death (factual and symbolic). Based on a methodology that we call the arc of life — which, inspired by the stylistic resource of the writer Conceição Evaristo in her work Olhos d'água, consists of presenting a significant group of women, with multiple characteristics and experiences, but which if observed together, could form an arc of life any black woman — we selected as our corpus: the column Negra, written by Lélia Gonzalez (1980); the column Mulher Negra e Pequim 95 - da Informação à Ação written by members of the Geledés Institute (1990); the column Opinião of Correio Braziliense newspaper, reproduced in Portal Geledés (2000), written by Sueli Carneiro; the opinion articles by Djamila Ribeiro in Blogueiras Negras (2010) and the article Últimas palavras by Marielle Franco (2018). Our approach to this material revealed that these women needed and continually need to destabilize the raciality device, which is manifested through a certain discursive authorization that creates legibilities, while imprisoning them in the social place of silencing. To do so, they create symbolic territories (online and offline), in which: 1) they define and evaluate themselves; 2) expose the interconnected nature of the oppressions that affect them and 3) value the culture itself. In other words, they carry out procedures of subjectivation and political emancipation — a recognition of themselves, different from the regulations of the raciality device. As all these dimensions of subjectivation and emancipation take race as a reference, but produce interactions whose meanings are different from those produced by the raciality device, our hypothesis is that these women constantly try to modify the arrangement of the elements that make up the device of raciality, so that they position themselves under an intersectional perspective and the interactions that occur in their environment no longer produce annihilation. It is a continuous attempt to engender in brazilian society an intersectional dispositional arrangement (BRAGA, 2018, 2020) of resistance to the racial device that will shape and guide interactions. A kind of against-device that manifests itself: with the entry into the order of discourse as columnists, in the organization and publication of their own demands, in the rescue and publication of their own history, in the exposure of oppressive social engineering, in the appreciation of their own culture, in the act of self-defining and self-evaluating.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2021-10-28
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2022-04-06T19:20:51Z
2025-09-09T01:17:45Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2022-04-06T19:20:51Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
format doctoralThesis
status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://hdl.handle.net/1843/40832
url https://hdl.handle.net/1843/40832
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv por
language por
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pt/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pt/
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFMG
instname:Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
instacron:UFMG
instname_str Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
instacron_str UFMG
institution UFMG
reponame_str Repositório Institucional da UFMG
collection Repositório Institucional da UFMG
bitstream.url.fl_str_mv https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/cbc4edaf-395b-4c2c-9acc-eaa971f8e8af/download
https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/36b5a34b-c0b0-431c-be0c-c6e166685ad4/download
https://repositorio.ufmg.br//bitstreams/2c91791f-4633-44be-8bd6-a09bcd53ea37/download
bitstream.checksum.fl_str_mv d7daf81a43b5ed9e67988934e836bc7b
cfd6801dba008cb6adbd9838b81582ab
cda590c95a0b51b4d15f60c9642ca272
bitstream.checksumAlgorithm.fl_str_mv MD5
MD5
MD5
repository.name.fl_str_mv Repositório Institucional da UFMG - Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv repositorio@ufmg.br
_version_ 1862105917451927552