HUMAN RIGHTS AND VISUAL NARRATIVES RACISM OF STATE IN BRAZIL
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22409/conflu.v25i2.57708Abstract
The present article is an interdisciplinary analysis of the processes of human rights violations and their relation to racism of state in Brazil. In this sense, we resort to imagetic sources that concentrate visual narratives of the framing of violence exerted on the bodies of black people. The theoretical path is guided by the social-political analysis of the historical articulations that circumscribe practices of exclusion and extermination of black people in our country. We intend to dimension, archeologically, how the racism of state expands to other social spheres, reverberating in the general frameworks of violence against the black population in Brazil. To this end, we consider in this research the theoretical contributions of authors such as Michel Foucault (1926-1984), Giorgio Agamben (1942) and Judith Butler (1956), in order to rethink biopower and its strategies of segregation and precariousness of racialized bodies. Tracing an archeological history, guided by visual narratives, we can observe a type of signature of violence that falls on the bodies of black people, which end up marked by the instrumental apparatus of biopower.
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Copyright (c) 2023 Maria Lúcia Rodrigues da Cruz, Iverson Custódio Kachenski
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