Brazilian Mulatice: Performing Race, Gender, and the Nation

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Brazilian Mulatice: Performing Race, Gender, and the Nation

resumo Este artigo analisa afigurada mulata no imaginario brasileiro situando-a no contexto do mito da mesticagem e procura estudar a relacao complexa que as mulheres cariocas tern com este ideal social. As experiencias de mulheres no mundo do samba demonstram que a performance da mulatice demanda trabalho corporal e discursive De fato, a identidade da mulata nao se opoe a de categorias como "branca" ou "negra", pois o conceito de raca no Brasil e tanto bipolar como continuo. Por exemplo, mulheres que se auto-definem como negras ao mesmo tempo utilizam o mito da mesticagem para ganhar acesso a remuneracao economica e reconhecimento social. Isto e possivel atraves da mulatice e de usos estrategicos da cultura afro-brasileira, dancando o samba em boates e desfiles de carnaval. O uso da "hibridacao estrategica" permite que jovens mulheres "sejam alguem" num pais que oferece escassas oportunidades aos afro-descendentes.

She says she has brown skin, and a feverish body And inside the chest, love of Brazil "I am Brazilian, my body reveals That my flag is green and yellow" -Carmen Miranda (1993)

A polysemic category, the term mulata1 in the Brazilian context can refer to "a woman of mixed racial descent,"2 but it also evokes images of voluptuous bodies, sensuality, and the ability to dance the samba. In its restricted sense, however, it names an occupation; that is, only women who engage in dancing the samba in a commodified spectacle and receive some form of remuneration for it can be called mulatas. As one of my female friends once remarked, "We are all mulatos at home, but there aren't any mulatas!" Beyond the subtleties of this and other distinctions, mulata is perhaps merely a privileged signifier in a larger paradigmatic chain associating cultural terms such as cabrocha, morena, and baiana. These terms denote "black woman" or "ligh skinned black woman" and are inscribed in Brazil's complex system of racial classification, composed of both a "fluid system" where slight gradations in skin color are construed as distinctions begging specific denomination, and a

The Journal of Latin American Anthropology 8(1):116-147 copyright Š 2003, American Anthropological Association

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Journal of Latin American Anthropology


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