#MariellePresente

world solidarities and painful realities and memories among Feminist/Queer/Black movements in Brazil

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9771/rantropologia.1.57132

Keywords:

Police Violence, intersectionality, Social Activism

Abstract

I will address the (painful) political and sociocultural context surrounding Marielle Franco’s murder in Brazil, in 2018. Marielle Franco was a Black, lesbian, feminist, activist, mother, partner, politician, and sociologist whose work focused on police violence and militarization. Her assassination constituted both a collective loss and a drastic turning point for those engaged in social struggles and the fight for justice for marginalised populations in Brazil. The attack against Marielle Franco — considered a powerful social symbol — and by extension a direct attack against leftist ways of thinking and the social achievements of Black, feminist, and queer movements in Brazil, can be perceived by some as a lost battle in the fight for equality in Brazil. In the middle of the historical violence that characterizes Brazil, which includes high rates of hate crimes and police brutality that comprises even murders (particularly against Black people), Marielle’s assassination became a sheer message for various social movements to realize what has socially been lost and the high stakes that Brazil faces regarding social equality today. I use Marielle Franco’s murder as an analytical site to disentangle Brazil’s evolving political and sociocultural context. This includes the various stances and social policies developed around gender, race, and sexuality (and their connection to left-wing and right-wing political fields) before the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff (Worker’s Party) and during the “coup d’etat” that led Michel Temer to power and the election of right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro. I also analyze how Franco’s political life and death (i.e. who did order her assassination?) have encouraged the development of transnational solidarity movements, specifically in Montreal.

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Author Biography

Felipe Bruno Martins Fernandes, Federal University of Bahia

Professor do Departamento de Antropologia e Etnologia da UFBA e coordenador do Gira - Grupo de Estudos Feministas em Política e Educação. Coordenador do curso de Licenciatura Intercultural Indígena (Edital PARFOR Equidade 2023). Mestre e doutor em Educação e Estudos de Gênero, com doutorado na UFSC e estágios no CLAGS/CUNY. Realizou três pós-doutorados em Estudos de Gênero, Antropologia Social e Antropologia da Educação. Seus interesses de pesquisa incluem políticas públicas de gênero e diversidade, movimentos LGBTTT, feministas e educação indígena

Published

2024-10-05

How to Cite

Fernandes, F. B. M. . (2024). #MariellePresente: world solidarities and painful realities and memories among Feminist/Queer/Black movements in Brazil. Anthropology Without Borders: Journal of the Graduate Program in Anthropology and the Department of Anthropology and Ethnology at UFBA, 1, e112403. https://doi.org/10.9771/rantropologia.1.57132

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Section

Artigos