-Advertisement-spot_img
spot_img

Samba schools honor Black Brazilian female authors during their Carnival parades

-Advertisement-spot_img

Must read

Samba and literature rarely share the same stage, but at this year’s Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, two samba schools used their parades to tell the stories of Black Brazilian female authors. It’s an unusual recognition of writers who have been historically marginalized due to their race and gender.

On Saturday, 79-year-old Conceição Evaristo, a writer from Minas Gerais known for her powerful works centering on Black women’s experiences, sat majestically atop a float designed by samba school Imperio Serrano at Rio’s famed Sambodrome.

Two days later, the samba school Unidos da Tijuca dedicated its parade to the late Carolina Maria de Jesus, a favela-based diarist who died nearly five decades ago, and also featured Evaristo.

“For Black women in Brazil everything is very difficult,” Evaristo said during an interview at the school’s warehouse while preparations were in full swing. The parade, she said, “presents other forms of knowledge that are born

You’ve reached your free article limit

Subscribe to enjoy unlimited access to trusted journalism. Start your free trial today.

Start your FREE trial now

Need help? molokom@insideeducation.co.za

-Advertisement-spot_img

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Inside Education Quarterly Print Edition

spot_img

CATHSSETA

spot_img

QCTO

spot_img

AVBOB STEP 12

spot_img

Inside Metros G20 COJ Edition

spot_img

JOZI MY JOZI

spot_img

Inside Education Quarterly Print Edition

spot_img

Latest article