RELAÇÕES ENTRE MULHERES BRANCAS E NEGRAS NO MOVIMENTO BANDEIRANTE 1940-1948

Authors

  • Daiane Brito Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

Keywords:

Mulheres Bandeirantes, Pensadoras feministas negras, Mulher negra, Mito da democracia racial, Movimento Bandeirante

Abstract

This article analyzes the relationships between white women and black women within the Bandeirante Movement, a non-formal education group arising from Scouting, organized by and for bourgeois women, founded in the city of Rio de Janeiro in 1919 and aimed at a female audience until the 1990s. de 1960. The guiding argument is that due to the characteristics of this group, the presence of black women was inexpressive, which resulted in the protagonism of white women. Through the analysis of the print “Bandeirantes”, a means of communication and a tool for transmitting the movement, it is possible to observe how black women were portrayed in the few times they appeared on those pages. In order to reflect and discuss the proposed question, the text has as theoretical support the literature of black feminist thinkers, highlighting the myth categories of racial democracy by Lélia Gonzalez and the condition of black women in society from Sueli Carneiro.

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Published

2024-03-19

How to Cite

Brito, D. (2024). RELAÇÕES ENTRE MULHERES BRANCAS E NEGRAS NO MOVIMENTO BANDEIRANTE 1940-1948. Humanidades Em Revista, 5(2), 62–78. Retrieved from https://seer.unirio.br/hr/article/view/12802