When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures

Abstract The article claims that the feminist movements emerging in the context of contemporary Latin American political struggles – such as Ni Una Menos – allow for a re-conceptualisation of the political, along with its subjects and objects. The uniqueness of these movements is predicated on the w...

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Main Author: Natália Maria Félix de Souza
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Series:Contexto Internacional
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292019000100089&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-a38945c333cc40ce9d734bdc4efc60f92020-11-25T00:04:38ZspaPontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de JaneiroContexto Internacional1982-02404118911210.1590/s0102-8529.2019410100005S0102-85292019000100089When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic FuturesNatália Maria Félix de SouzaAbstract The article claims that the feminist movements emerging in the context of contemporary Latin American political struggles – such as Ni Una Menos – allow for a re-conceptualisation of the political, along with its subjects and objects. The uniqueness of these movements is predicated on the way they managed to link the ordinary killings of women’s bodies to the extraordinary alliances between different social movements. A closer inspection into these ongoing experiences that mobilise different, rhizomatic arenas of political entanglements – such as the internet and the streets – allows us to see how Latin American feminist attachments and movements can redefine democratic practices and build different forms of community. By resisting what is perceived as ‘a war against women in Latin America,’ these movements allow for understanding the operation of a gendered necropolitics, which ties women’s death with the ultimate functioning of modern politics and modern subjectivities. In doing so, they politicise not only the lives (and therefore voices) of women who are struggling in/for the political, but also the deaths (and therefore silences) on which the political has been built. Furthermore, by politicising the role of the body in the political and ethical arena, these movements open our political imaginaries to the possibilities of new attachments, filiations and articulations that are not subsumed under abstract universal categories and values, nor limited to identitarian and thus legalistic affirmations of the political. Following these arguments, I argue that contemporary feminist articulations in Latin America productively dispute the validity of the abstract, universal, modern ‘human’ to think alternative political futures. By politicising materiality and embodiment alongside language and discourse as productive of political ontologies, feminists open the space for reclaiming the political function of the female body.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292019000100089&lng=en&tlng=enLatin Americabodyfeminismdemocratic politicspolitical resistancefemicide
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natália Maria Félix de Souza
spellingShingle Natália Maria Félix de Souza
When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
Contexto Internacional
Latin America
body
feminism
democratic politics
political resistance
femicide
author_facet Natália Maria Félix de Souza
author_sort Natália Maria Félix de Souza
title When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
title_short When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
title_full When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
title_fullStr When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
title_full_unstemmed When the Body Speaks (to) the Political: Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Democratic Futures
title_sort when the body speaks (to) the political: feminist activism in latin america and the quest for alternative democratic futures
publisher Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
series Contexto Internacional
issn 1982-0240
description Abstract The article claims that the feminist movements emerging in the context of contemporary Latin American political struggles – such as Ni Una Menos – allow for a re-conceptualisation of the political, along with its subjects and objects. The uniqueness of these movements is predicated on the way they managed to link the ordinary killings of women’s bodies to the extraordinary alliances between different social movements. A closer inspection into these ongoing experiences that mobilise different, rhizomatic arenas of political entanglements – such as the internet and the streets – allows us to see how Latin American feminist attachments and movements can redefine democratic practices and build different forms of community. By resisting what is perceived as ‘a war against women in Latin America,’ these movements allow for understanding the operation of a gendered necropolitics, which ties women’s death with the ultimate functioning of modern politics and modern subjectivities. In doing so, they politicise not only the lives (and therefore voices) of women who are struggling in/for the political, but also the deaths (and therefore silences) on which the political has been built. Furthermore, by politicising the role of the body in the political and ethical arena, these movements open our political imaginaries to the possibilities of new attachments, filiations and articulations that are not subsumed under abstract universal categories and values, nor limited to identitarian and thus legalistic affirmations of the political. Following these arguments, I argue that contemporary feminist articulations in Latin America productively dispute the validity of the abstract, universal, modern ‘human’ to think alternative political futures. By politicising materiality and embodiment alongside language and discourse as productive of political ontologies, feminists open the space for reclaiming the political function of the female body.
topic Latin America
body
feminism
democratic politics
political resistance
femicide
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292019000100089&lng=en&tlng=en
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