Subtopic Deep Dive

Black Feminism in Brazil
Research Guide

What is Black Feminism in Brazil?

Black Feminism in Brazil examines intersectional theories, activism, and epistemologies addressing race, gender, and class oppressions faced by Black Brazilian women, including quilombola communities and domestic workers.

This subtopic analyzes Black feminist thought from thinkers like Lélia Gonzalez and movements from 1975-1993. Key works cover health, reproductive rights, and resistance against racism and sexism (Damasco et al., 2012, 40 citations; Cardoso, 2014, 74 citations). Over 10 major papers since 2008 explore interseccionalidade in Brazilian contexts, with Piscitelli (2008) at 262 citations.

15
Curated Papers
3
Key Challenges

Why It Matters

Black Feminism in Brazil informs policies on gendered racial violence and domestic workers' rights by critiquing white feminism and highlighting quilombola resistance (Werneck, 2016). Cardoso (2014) shows Lélia Gonzalez's amefricanization of feminism aids global theory via afrolatinoamericano perspectives. Rodrigues and Freitas (2021) trace activism evolution, impacting education on intersectional identities and anti-racist curricula.

Key Research Challenges

Mapping Historical Trajectories

Tracing Black feminist activism from 1975-1993 requires linking fragmented sources on reproductive health and race (Damasco et al., 2012). Limited pre-2015 digitized archives hinder comprehensive timelines. Werneck (2016) notes diverse community insertions complicate unified narratives.

Operationalizing Interseccionalidade

Applying intersectionality to race, gender, and class in Brazil demands nuanced category articulation beyond U.S. models (Piscitelli, 2008; Kyrillos, 2020). Moutinho (2014) highlights negotiations in academic productions on sexuality and rights. Brazilian specificities like quilombo resistance add contextual layers.

Bridging Activism and Academia

Connecting grassroots movements to scholarly discourse faces gaps in data on NGOs and militants (Santos, 2010; Rodrigues and Freitas, 2021). Pires (2018) racializes dictatorship memory, revealing overlooked Black resistance. Standardizing discourse repertoires across eras remains unresolved.

Essential Papers

1.

Interseccionalidades, categorias de articulação e experiências de migrantes brasileiras

Adriana Piscitelli · 2008 · Sociedade e Cultura · 262 citations

Neste texto apresento alguns comentários sobre o surgimento de categorias que aludem à multiplicidade de diferenciações que, articulando-se a gênero, permeiam o social. São as categorias de articul...

2.

O aborto como direito e o aborto como crime: o retrocesso neoconservador

Lia Zanotta Machado · 2017 · Cadernos Pagu · 104 citations

Resumo Este artigo analisa o confronto político entre as argumentações feministas e as fundamentalistas sobre o aborto, no Brasil dos anos dois mil. Está em jogo a disputa por concepções de vida. A...

3.

Uma Análise Crítica sobre os Antecedentes da Interseccionalidade

Gabriela M. Kyrillos · 2020 · Revista Estudos Feministas · 97 citations

Resumo: A maior utilização da interseccionalidade no campo dos estudos de gênero tem se revelado de grande importância para a melhor compreensão das relações múltiplas e simultâneas de desigualdade...

4.

Diferenças e desigualdades negociadas: raça, sexualidade e gênero em produções acadêmicas recentes

Laura Moutinho · 2014 · Cadernos Pagu · 93 citations

Muitas das recentes reflexões acerca da produção da diferença e da análise da desigualdade social vêm investindo na articulação entre os chamados "marcadores sociais da diferença". Nesse amplo cená...

5.

Amefricanizando o feminismo: o pensamento de Lélia Gonzalez

Cláudia Pons Cardoso · 2014 · Revista Estudos Feministas · 74 citations

Neste artigo exploro o pensamento de Lélia Gonzalez, intelectual negra brasileira, defensora de um feminismo afrolatinoamericano, comprometido com a recuperação dos processos de resistência e insur...

6.

Estruturas Intocadas: Racismo e Ditadura no Rio de Janeiro

Thula Rafaela de Oliveira Pires · 2018 · Revista Direito e Práxis · 49 citations

Resumo O trabalho pretende racializar a produção de memória sobre a ditadura empresarial-militar no Brasil, destacando formas de resistência negra organizadas nos anos 1960-1980. Parte-se da hipóte...

7.

Feminismo negro: raça, identidade e saúde reprodutiva no Brasil (1975-1993)

Mariana Santos Damasco, Marcos Chor Maio, Simone Monteiro · 2012 · Revista Estudos Feministas · 40 citations

Este artigo tem o propósito de investigar as interfaces entre gênero, cor/raça e saúde pública no Brasil, tendo como foco a importância da saúde reprodutiva para a constituição de um feminismo negr...

Reading Guide

Foundational Papers

Start with Piscitelli (2008, 262 citations) for interseccionalidades basics, Cardoso (2014, 74 citations) for Lélia Gonzalez's core thought, and Damasco et al. (2012, 40 citations) for 1975-1993 health activism foundations.

Recent Advances

Study Kyrillos (2020, 97 citations) on interseccionalidade critiques, Rodrigues and Freitas (2021, 37 citations) on activism trajectories, and Conrado and Ribeiro (2017, 34 citations) on Black masculinities.

Core Methods

Core techniques: historical analysis of movements (Werneck, 2016), critical discourse on inequalities (Moutinho, 2014), and racial memory production (Pires, 2018).

How PapersFlow Helps You Research Black Feminism in Brazil

Discover & Search

Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to find core papers like Piscitelli (2008, 262 citations) on interseccionalidades, then citationGraph reveals clusters around Lélia Gonzalez via Cardoso (2014). findSimilarPapers expands to activism histories like Werneck (2016).

Analyze & Verify

Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to extract Gonzalez's afrolatinoamericano framework from Cardoso (2014), then verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against Damasco et al. (2012). runPythonAnalysis with pandas tallies citation themes across 10 papers; GRADE scores evidence strength for reproductive rights arguments.

Synthesize & Write

Synthesis Agent detects gaps in pre-1993 activism coverage, flagging contradictions between U.S. and Brazilian interseccionalidade (Kyrillos, 2020). Writing Agent uses latexEditText and latexSyncCitations to draft reports with Rodrigues and Freitas (2021), then latexCompile generates polished PDFs; exportMermaid visualizes activism timelines.

Use Cases

"Analyze citation networks of Black feminist activism papers from 1975-2021 in Brazil"

Research Agent → citationGraph on Piscitelli (2008) → runPythonAnalysis (networkx for centrality) → centrality-ranked list of influencers like Cardoso (2014) and Werneck (2016).

"Draft LaTeX review on Lélia Gonzalez's influence in Brazilian Black feminism"

Synthesis Agent → gap detection in Cardoso (2014) → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations (10 papers) → latexCompile → camera-ready review PDF with bibliography.

"Find code or data repos linked to interseccionalidade studies in Brazil"

Research Agent → paperExtractUrls from Moutinho (2014) → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → datasets on race-gender negotiations for Python reanalysis.

Automated Workflows

Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ interseccionalidade papers: searchPapers → citationGraph → GRADE grading → structured report on Black feminism evolution (Piscitelli 2008 to Rodrigues 2021). DeepScan's 7-step analysis verifies Werneck (2016) claims with CoVe checkpoints and runPythonAnalysis on activist timelines. Theorizer generates hypotheses on quilombola feminism gaps from Damasco et al. (2012).

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines Black Feminism in Brazil?

It centers intersectional oppressions of race, gender, and class for Black women, from Lélia Gonzalez's afrolatinoamericano thought (Cardoso, 2014) to 1975-1993 reproductive health activism (Damasco et al., 2012).

What are key methods in this subtopic?

Methods include discourse analysis of activist repertoires (Rodrigues and Freitas, 2021), historical racialization of memory (Pires, 2018), and interseccionalidade articulation mapping (Piscitelli, 2008).

Which papers have highest impact?

Piscitelli (2008, 262 citations) on interseccionalidades leads, followed by Machado (2017, 104 citations) on abortion rights and Moutinho (2014, 93 citations) on race-sexuality negotiations.

What open problems persist?

Bridging NGO activism data gaps (Santos, 2010), standardizing masculinities in Black feminism (Conrado and Ribeiro, 2017), and extending analyses to post-2021 migrations (Kyrillos, 2020).

Research Race, Identity, and Education in Brazil with AI

PapersFlow provides specialized AI tools for Social Sciences researchers. Here are the most relevant for this topic:

See how researchers in Social Sciences use PapersFlow

Field-specific workflows, example queries, and use cases.

Social Sciences Guide

Start Researching Black Feminism in Brazil with AI

Search 474M+ papers, run AI-powered literature reviews, and write with integrated citations — all in one workspace.

See how PapersFlow works for Social Sciences researchers