Silva, Maria Beatriz Dias da; https://orcid.org/0009-0005-9469-6815; lattes.cnpq.br/0082423154849037
Resumo:
The aim of this research was to analyze how lesbians and/or lesbian identities appear in
decisions of the Superior Court of Justice (STJ), in order to understand how these identities are
juridically (re)produced. To this end, the specific objectives included a discussion on
cisheteronormativity in the legal system, with an emphasis on lesbofeminist critique.
Subsequently, monocratic decisions and judgments from the STJ related to legal cases
involving lesbians or lesbian identities in contexts of violence were selected to analyze the
jurisprudence on the topic. Finally, through a categorization process, the research identified
how lesbians and lesbian identities are portrayed in the selected jurisprudence. The research
addressed the question: how do lesbians or lesbian identities appear in judicial decisions of the
STJ that involve lesbians as plaintiffs and/or victims or in contexts of violence? The study
adopted the content analysis method, applied to 40 summaries of judgments and judicial
decisions issued by the STJ between 2013 and 2023. As a result, eight categories were
identified: a) naturalization of familial lesbophobia, b) phallocentrism, c) heterosexuality as a
benchmark, d) lesbian identity erasure, e) lesbian identity as an insult, f) lesbians as a
minoritized group, g) criminalizing adjectives, and h) "sapatão" as a cognomen in drug
trafficking. The results reveal an understanding of Brazilian lesbianities in contexts of violence,
emphasizing the diverse meanings attributed to lesbianities in situations involving family
relationships, generational dynamics, and criminality.