The history of Afro-Brazilian art as the history of Afro-Brazilian art exhibitions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29147/dat.v5i3.250Keywords:
Colonialism, History, Circulation / Art, RacismAbstract
The protests triggered by the murder of the African American George Floyd once again denounce the structural racism that characterizes Western societies from all quarters, the violence that hit has been promoted by the State and is the same that everyday annihilate in the suburbs of the whole world the lives
of female and male blacks, notably the youngest, and confirms that inequality is an indelible mark not only of societies subjected to the colonialist yoke but also of those who promote it. This has suggested, or rather, demanded the construction of new pedagogical strategies and ethical protocols that make it possible to consolidate and make visible divergent narratives that contemplate the symbolic production of historically excluded groups for the benefit of more democratic and plural social scenarios. Therefore, the role that the arts play in the construction of anti and/or non-racist and anti-colonial imaginary is central, which making essential the construction and diffusion of a story that contemplates this option.
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References
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