Imagery mediations and the coloniality of genres as prescriptive in representations and narratives about black Brazilian women
The present research aims to analyze the Brazilian black woman incarnated in constant re-elaborations and social arrangements, for the permanence of her subaltern condition, having their respective experiences guided by the coloniality of power and genders. The racialized body, inspected by racism and sexism, which is permeated, governed and maintained by social functions, very well described by Gonzalez (2020), also called by Collins (2019) “images of control”. We elaborated the following research question: considering the market, social movements and the intelligentsia itself as arenas of permanent disputes, how has the phenomenon of “late blackness” occurred in Brazil in the last 30 years? The search for theoretical foundations in ethnic-racial studies presents us with the social reading of black Brazilian women. We will present an interpretation of “late blackness as an event, with due reflection in racial ethnic studies, in miscegenation as a category of disguised racism, in Afro-American thought, in gender coloniality along with American intersectional theory. We remind you that the guiding thread for such interpretation/analysis will be via imagery representations involving black Brazilian women