Scientia International Journal for Social Sciences 8 of 12
The editorial of the 1988 I Encontro Nacional de Mulheres Negras outlines the entire trajectory of
preparation for the event, its structuring, and the importance of this meeting. The text also clarifies the reasons
that made this meeting and the formation of the MMN necessary, highlighting its historical role in the
development of Black women's political and social thought in Brazil:
The I Encontro Nacional de Mulheres Negras will be a milestone in our history, less for its political character than for its
ideological function. The primary purpose of this meeting is to bring together Black women from all over the national
territory and lead us to reflect on the true reason that makes us different, or the reason why we are given treatment different
from the other individuals who make up society. (Nzinga, 1988: 2)
Already in this first paragraph, Black women affirm that the First Meeting is a historical milestone, not
because of its political seriousness, but especially because of its role in questions of values. What those
women defended was that the meeting would not be only about practical or political issues, which at that
moment were in a process of maturation. They wanted more than demands, legal transformations, or rights:
Black women were claiming something more, situated in the field of subjectivity, the symbolic, the
ideological. In short, the Meeting created possibilities for thinking and discussing broader and diverse issues,
such as identity, values, struggles, and the resignification of being a Black woman.
The Meeting sought to bring together the largest possible number of Black women from across the country,
building a place of speech and exchanging experiences. Their objective was to build a web of cooperation
and thus consolidate the MMN in the country through Black women themselves. When they call attention to
what makes them different, Black women are, in fact, saying: "Oh! We are more than a mulatta or a domestic
worker." The differentiated treatment they point out is what must be understood. For what reason are Black
women treated differently in Brazilian society? Differentiated treatment reinforces the idea of structural
racism and makes intersectional the combination of race, class, and gender. In this way, Black women reflect
on what it means to be a Black woman in Brazil; for this reason, the proposal of this meeting was to analyze
the sources of racial and social inequalities and discrimination, and to reflect on deeper experiences, lived
realities, and confrontations.
We start from the assumption that social movements aim to achieve social and political changes through
social tensions and political clashes. Thus, we could understand that, from the various meetings, the openings
that were being created needed to give way to voices not of victimization but of resistance, generating a
notion of belonging and citizenship based on ancestry through processes that marked and demarcated
perspectives of self-defined self-formation, with postures of resignification and resistance. In this way, we
can also cite the line of thought of the informational editorial Nzinga, which shows how in the 1970s there
were many advances in the creation of state and municipal councils, women's police stations, and also greater
participation by Black women in meetings, gatherings, and forums, all of which were significant for the
struggle of Black people. The editorial further points out that
What is actually under discussion is the space in which each person wishes to act. And we at NZINGA have chosen to
work with Black Women's issues. And it is because we believe in this that we are effectively participating in the
organization of the I ENCONTRO NACIONAL DE MULHERES NEGRAS, an idea launched by a group of Black
women present at the IX National Feminist Meeting, in the city of Garanhuns (PE), in September 1987. Among the
objectives of the Meeting is "... the elaboration of political proposals that advance the organization of Black women,
presenting to the world the existence of the Movimento de Mulheres Negras in Brazil in a unitary form and with different
political currents." And, also because we believe in this, we will be on December 2 at the National Meeting, somewhere
in Rio de Janeiro. (Nzinga, 1988: 2)
The editorial of the I Encontro Nacional de Mulheres Negras, published in the magazine Nzinga, is itself
a concrete example of situated knowledge production. By affirming that the meeting would have an
ideological function before a political one, Black women were formulating their own theory of what social
transformation means - a theory that does not start from academic categories, but from the experiences of
those who live oppression daily. In the same way, the MMN's bulletins and communication networks
functioned as instruments for systematizing and circulating collective knowledge, creating their own political