WRITING BY WOMEN IN ANTHROPOLOGY:

FROM CLASSIC TO INDIGENOUS ANTHROPOLOGISTS

Authors

  • Louise Caroline Gomes Branco

Abstract

The objective of this paper is to analyze the production of anthropological knowledge and how the women who produce it have modified it. To this end, I present the trajectory of six anthropologists who occupied different spaces of power and subordination, and who contributed with writings and methodologies to Anthropology. I come from classic authors, Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict. Then, I dialogue with the creative writing process of Zora Neale Hurston and Ruth Landes, women who did not gain status in the anthropological canon. Finally, I present the production of two indigenous anthropologists, Tayse Campos da Silva and Sandra Benites, who are rethinking their communities and contributing to other epistemologies. I conclude by demonstrating the importance of incorporating methods and references from indigenous, black and peripheral people, to transform the university and Anthropology.

KEYWORDS: Anthropology. Writing. Indigenous Women. Classical Theory.

IMAGE: Photo essay by Geslline Giovana Braga. Source: Iluminuras Magazine

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Author Biography

Louise Caroline Gomes Branco

Master in Social Anthropology, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

IMAGE: Photo essay by Geslline Giovana Braga. Source: Iluminuras Magazine

Published

2024-02-28