Bikuda: hair, aesthetic, and bodily perspectives from women in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

Q1 Social Sciences
Sheryl Felecia Means
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The Steve Biko Cultural Institute (Biko) is one of various institutions that aim to educate civically active Afro-descendant youth in Salvador who hope to enter higher education spaces. From this institution emerge the Bikudas, the female students. This paper analyzes semi-structured interviews and observations of this group from 2015 to 2016 and their shared experiences. The three aims of the paper are as follows regarding analysis of: (1) the plurality of Black identity; (2) the intersectionality Bikudas navigate as part of their social positioning within family, and relationships; and (3) how Black womanhood manifests on the body. This paper discusses how participants described their social standing as the lowest rank and struggled with their interactions with others on the basis of color, were often rejected by family members for wearing their hair naturally and assuming outward markers of Black identity, and endured greater socioeconomic burdens than their male counterparts.
Bikuda:萨尔瓦多、巴伊亚、巴西女性的头发、美学和身体视角
史蒂夫·比科文化学院(Steve Biko Cultural Institute,简称Biko)是众多旨在教育萨尔瓦多公民活跃的非裔青年的机构之一,这些青年希望进入高等教育领域。从这所学校里出现了女学生Bikudas。本文分析了2015年至2016年这一群体的半结构化访谈和观察,以及他们的共同经历。本文的三个目的是:(1)黑人身份的多元性;(2) 作为他们在家庭和关系中的社会定位的一部分,Bikudas所处的交叉性;以及(3)黑人女性在身体上的表现。这篇论文讨论了参与者如何将自己的社会地位描述为最低级别,并在与他人的互动中因肤色而挣扎,如何经常因头发自然而被家庭成员拒绝,如何承担黑人身份的外在标志,以及如何比男性承受更大的社会经济负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
African and Black Diaspora
African and Black Diaspora Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
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