À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire

If eroticism, as Bataille states, distinguishes human sexuality – as it institutes the modern subject as the effect of desire – it belongs in critical analyses of the conditions of production of modern subjects. For this reason, in this paper, I revisit articulations of the erotic in Freyre’s vers...

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Main Author: Denise Ferreira da Silva
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2006-01-01
Series:Revista Estudos Feministas
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ref/article/view/8288
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spelling doaj-9f150ecb2287401ebf5b74887aec474f2020-11-25T00:54:23ZspaUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaRevista Estudos Feministas0104-026X1806-95842006-01-011417127À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive DesireDenise Ferreira da Silva0University of California, San DiegoIf eroticism, as Bataille states, distinguishes human sexuality – as it institutes the modern subject as the effect of desire – it belongs in critical analyses of the conditions of production of modern subjects. For this reason, in this paper, I revisit articulations of the erotic in Freyre’s version of the Brazilian national subject. I trace how eroticism produces a racial figure, the mestiço, whose particularity resides in that it is an eschatological object, i.e. a historical figure destined to disappear. While this figure has been celebrated as the unifying, productive symbol of Brazilianness, it has opposite material effects. As a political/symbolic device, the mestiço institutes subaltern social subjects. This results from how miscegenation, as a historical signifier, anticipates the (physical and symbolic) obliteration of blacks and Indians. This, I show, results from the construction of the nonwhite female as an instrument (not as an object) of colonial desire. As such, it is also presupposed in the mechanisms of racial subject governing contemporary Brazil.https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ref/article/view/8288erotismo, sexualidade, miscigenação, Brasil, patriarcado
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Denise Ferreira da Silva
spellingShingle Denise Ferreira da Silva
À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
Revista Estudos Feministas
erotismo, sexualidade, miscigenação, Brasil, patriarcado
author_facet Denise Ferreira da Silva
author_sort Denise Ferreira da Silva
title À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
title_short À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
title_full À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
title_fullStr À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
title_full_unstemmed À Brasileira: Raciality and the Writing of a Destructive Desire
title_sort à brasileira: raciality and the writing of a destructive desire
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
series Revista Estudos Feministas
issn 0104-026X
1806-9584
publishDate 2006-01-01
description If eroticism, as Bataille states, distinguishes human sexuality – as it institutes the modern subject as the effect of desire – it belongs in critical analyses of the conditions of production of modern subjects. For this reason, in this paper, I revisit articulations of the erotic in Freyre’s version of the Brazilian national subject. I trace how eroticism produces a racial figure, the mestiço, whose particularity resides in that it is an eschatological object, i.e. a historical figure destined to disappear. While this figure has been celebrated as the unifying, productive symbol of Brazilianness, it has opposite material effects. As a political/symbolic device, the mestiço institutes subaltern social subjects. This results from how miscegenation, as a historical signifier, anticipates the (physical and symbolic) obliteration of blacks and Indians. This, I show, results from the construction of the nonwhite female as an instrument (not as an object) of colonial desire. As such, it is also presupposed in the mechanisms of racial subject governing contemporary Brazil.
topic erotismo, sexualidade, miscigenação, Brasil, patriarcado
url https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ref/article/view/8288
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