Exu is not Satan – the dialogics of memory and resistance among Afro-Brazilians

Q1 Social Sciences
Antonio José Bacelar da Silva
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Abstract

ABSTRACT In 2000s Brazil, an unprecedented number of Brazilian afrodescendentes (Afro-Descendants) have been mobilizing to secure rights and resources for the Brazilian black population. From carnival parading in ‘cultural’ groups to electoral campaigning, from consciousness-raising education to antiracist community outreach, black activists have been aggressively taking a critical stance toward the discursive fabric of Brazilian race relations and national identity. Placing examples of their discursive struggles over Afro-Brazilian history and culture under the lens of intertextual and heteroglossic relations, I illustrate black activists’ efforts to dispute what they see as misconceptions about black people and blackness that have found their way into the dominant narrative conceptions of Brazilian society. In doing so, I argue, they are accomplishing something of broader social significance: They are revising not only the history and collective memory of race relations in Brazil but blackness itself.
Exu不是撒旦——非裔巴西人记忆和抵抗的对话
摘要在21世纪初的巴西,空前数量的巴西黑人动员起来,为巴西黑人争取权利和资源。从“文化”团体的狂欢游行到竞选活动,从提高意识的教育到反种族主义的社区宣传,黑人活动家一直在积极地对巴西种族关系和国家认同的散漫结构采取批评立场。我将他们在非裔巴西历史和文化上的话语斗争的例子放在互文和异语关系的镜头下,展示了黑人活动家努力反驳他们所认为的对黑人和黑人的误解,这些误解已经进入了巴西社会的主导叙事概念。我认为,通过这样做,他们正在完成一些具有更广泛社会意义的事情:他们不仅在修改巴西种族关系的历史和集体记忆,而且在修改黑人本身。
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来源期刊
African and Black Diaspora
African and Black Diaspora Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
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