Militants and Guerrilla Women:
women and military dictatorship in Brazil
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21680/1984-817X.2019v15n01ID19186Abstract
Political history is a man's thing the history of the military dictatorship in Brazil is the radicalization of the invisibility of the feminine. Political militant women were not regarded as historical subjects, therefore, excluded from the power play, historical accounts and documentation of the period. Gender inequality remains alarming today. Our purpose in this paper is to take a brief look at the literature on women and military dictatorship and to establish two forms of resistance. The first is to write about the military dictatorship, as opposed to the owners of power, who want to erase this tragic period from our history. And the second form of resistance is to write about women during the dictatorship, a male-dominated space like the Araguaia Guerrilla, where many women, regarded as guerrillas, lost their lives.
KEYWORDS: Women; military dictatorship; resistance; militants.
Downloads
Additional Files
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The submission of manuscripts to this journal implies the transfer, by the authors, of the rights of printed and digital publication. The authors own copyrights to the works they have created and grant to the journal the right to initial publication, with simultaneous work licensed under the Creative Commons License CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, and for publication rights. The authors can publish their work online in institutional/disciplinary repositories or in their own websites. Authors can only use the same results in other publications, clearly indicating this journal as the means of the original publication.
The author also agrees to submit the work to the publication rules of the Espacialidades Journal mentioned above.
Espacialidades Journal is an open access journal under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)