A look at female protagonism in the History Teaching in Brazil
International Journal of Development Research
A look at female protagonism in the History Teaching in Brazil
Received 17th July, 2020; Received in revised form 28th August, 2020; Accepted 14th September, 2020; Published online 24th October, 2020
Copyright © 2020, Alcione Aparecida da Silva. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This essay presents discussions about the approach to female protagonism in History Teaching in Brazil and in History itself, recognizing the absence of these characters in the face of a segregationist process. Therefore, female protagonism and gender research are taken as the theme. It appears that on the international stage, the suffragist movement, in the 20th century, served as an impetus to the movement of bourgeois women who sought to claim the right to universal vote, as an important mechanism of collective desire and political instrument. In Brazil, from 1980 onwards, groups called “minorities” started to be approached, which included blacks, children, transvestites, etc. As a result of the research, the debasing official representation of the woman figure as inferior to the man. The research is based on a bibliographic survey on the subject.