Alves Neto, Manoel Gildo; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0943-6321; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1614781215163097
Resumo:
This Tesis takes place at the crossroads between Dance education and Africanness in
pursuit of an Afro-perspective education, assuming the transformative and transgressive
character of Exu, both political and poetic, as a third way. The central question is how
Black artivism sensitizes and/or impacts the “Scripted School,” transforming the absence
of Dance and Africanness into presence. The general objective of the research was to map
choreopolitics and gestures of resistance that interconnected Dance and Africanness
within the scope of Education for Racial and Ethnical Relationships. From crossroads,
confluences, (re)encounters, and trajectories alongside Black artivists in distinct Afro
diasporic territories, in the city of Pelotas/RS (A) in the Dance-undergraduate Program at
the Federal University of Pelotas, (B) the Afro Dance Company Daniel Amaro
(Pelotas/RS), and (C) the Black Dance Collective of Pelotas/RS, and in the city of
Remanso/BA (D) in the Theater Group of the State School Professor Irene de Souza
Araujo, and (E) the “Blackatitude” Program. From these collectivities, seven actions were
identified, four of which were categorized and analyzed as choreopolitics and three as
gestures of resistance. The result is the processual elaboration of an Afro-perspective
epistemic-methodological approach grounded in Nagô frame, entitled Pa(dê)ciência,
whose design intertwines three important foundations of the Nagô-Yorùbá cosmogony:
patience (Surú), character (Ìwà), and encounter (Ìpádè). These principles are established
as a path for thinking-dancing, enacting, recording, and analyzing the actions undertaken
by Black artivism in favor of an Afro-perspective education. The research demonstrates
how Black artivism has developed political, pedagogical, and artistic strategies to
promote the teaching process of Africanness in dance, while also highlighting that this
artivism transcends adult-centrism, cisgender normativity, racism and the coloniality of
knowledge enabling the creation of an exuberant school.