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nor meant that people of African descent believed it. Women of African descent may have constituted a visible and sizable segment of Brazilian society, yet in a Brazil that ostensibly lacked race, the category of black women did not exist as an officially recognized population. Black women challenged these historical interconnections between ideas about race and Brazil’s nation-building project as setting the stage for the erasure of Afro-Brazilian women.

      The festival cultivated a range of relationships that typically were seen as separate. As is the case with intersectionality, the festival accommodated people from all walks of life. Community organizers, professors, graduate students, parents, artists, schoolteachers, high-school students, representatives of samba schools, government officials, and music lovers, among others, all made the journey to Brasilia to attend Latinidades. The festival centered on women of African descent, but many men and members of diverse racial/ethnic groups from all areas of Brazil’s states and regions, as well as from Costa Rica, Ecuador, and other Latin American and Caribbean nations, also attended. This transregional and transnational heterogeneity enabled participants to share their strategies for tackling how racism and sexism affected Afro-Latin women.

      Latinadades’s use of intersectionality as an analytic tool for structuring the conference illustrates broader issues concerning how Afro-Brazilian women’s longstanding commitment to challenging racism and sexism reflects the specific social context of their experiences. Notwithstanding its myth of racial democracy, Brazil’s specific history with slavery, colonialism, dictatorship, and democratic institutions has shaped its distinctive patterns of intersecting power relations of race, gender, and sexuality. Sexual engagements, both consensual and forced, among African, indigenous, and European-descended populations created a Brazilian population with varying hair textures, skin colors, body shapes, and eye colors, as well as a complex and historically shifting series of terms to describe them. Skin color, hair texture, facial features, and other aspects of appearance became de facto racial markers for distributing education, jobs, and other social goods. As Kia Caldwell points out, “popular images of Brazil as a carnivalesque, tropical paradise have played a central role in contemporary constructions of mulata women’s social identities. Brazil’s international reputation as a racial democracy is closely tied to the sexual objectification of women of mixed racial ancestry as the essence of Brazilianness” (2007: 58). For Afro-Brazilian women, those of mixed ancestry or with more European physical features are typically considered to be more attractive. Moreover, women of visible African ancestry are typically constructed as non-sexualized, and often as asexual laborers or, conversely, as prostitutes (Caldwell 2007: 51). Appearance not only carries differential weight for women and men, but different stereotypes of black women rest on beliefs about their sexuality. These ideas feed back into notions of national identity, using race, gender, sexuality, and color as intersecting phenomena.

      Unlike white Brazilian women, black Brazilians of all sexes and genders had to create the collective political identity of “black” in order to build an antiracist social movement that highlighted the effects of anti-black racism. Brazil’s history with transatlantic slavery left it with a large population of African descent – by some estimates, 50 percent of the Brazilian population. Those who claimed an identity as “black” seemed to contradict the national identity of racial democracy, and thus ran the risk of being accused of disloyalty and not being fully Brazilian. In this sense, the Black Movement that emerged in the 1990s did not call for equal treatment within the democratic state for an already recognized group. Rather, recognition meant both naming a sizable segment of the population and acknowledging that it experienced anti-black racial discrimination (Hanchard 1994).

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