Nascimento, Gabriela do Nascimento Gabriela; https://lattes.cnpq.br/0435668970149734
Resumo:
This doctoral thesis in ethnomusicology is an autoethnography (MAIA, Suzan;
BATISTA, 2020) aims to understand, through ethnographic work, the sound-musical
processes that encompass and imprison female bodies, the vast majority of whom are
black, in distinct territories. The first space refers to the Mata Escura Women's
Penitentiary Complex, in Salvador/BA, where I conducted my research with four
women, aged 35 to 53, who are serving prison sentences in the “safe” pavilion of the
aforementioned penitentiary. The second territory encompasses different spaces and
makes references to the black singer of the Afro block, Karina Neres, aged 53, and
myself. Of the six women I chose to discuss, four are black and two are non-black. I
chose to address these interlocutors, having as research problems the territorial,
cultural and structural imprisonments concomitantly with the social violence inherent
not only to this prison space, but also in relation to the difficulties existing in musical
territories that make us, black singers, see ourselves imprisoned in a context of social
invisibility, prejudice, machismo and social stereotypes, imposed by society.To this
end, I use multi-sited ethnography (Marcus, 1995) as a way of describing and
analyzing these movements, especially those of singer Karina Neres and myself, who
circulated in different places during the research. This fact does not differentiate us
from the other interlocutors, since our lives intersect due to the ethnic and social
conditions inherent to our skin color. In this sense, in my work I sought to understand
how these women perceive the processes of sounds, music, poetry, musical memories,
perception of themselves and others in different contexts. For these reasons, and as a
feedback from a feminist, black and engaged ethnomusicology, I propose the concept
of Feminine Musicalentar based on pedagogies experienced and co-created within the
scope of Feminaria Musical: a research and sound experiments group, of which I have
been a member since 2020, especially with regard to the understanding of
music/sound experiments and voice/singing as a tool for healing and Well-Being
(theme of the 1st March of Black Women) for all women as a human right, without
distinction. Through participant observation, field diaries, interviews, image records,
conversation circles, writings and reflections on the lives of these women, I will seek
to elucidate the role of music in the reconstruction and identity affirmation of these
female bodies and to compose my theoretical basis, having as main references the
authors: Jon Lomax (1936); Jason Benjamin (2010); Laila Rosa (2013); Nana Queiroz
(2015); Noemi Viana (2015); Angela Davis (2018); Juliana Borges (2019); Ossimar
Franco (2021) among other researchers who help us think about ethnomusicology in
different territories with and from music and sound. These perceptions will be
interpreted through the writings and memories of these six collaborators. The
aforementioned research, in multiple fields, national, international and virtual, was
carried out between April two thousand and twenty-two and November two thousand
and twenty-three.