Territorial feminisms: what are quilombola women fighting for?
Quilombolas, women; black; feminism; territorial rights;
This research aimed to dialogue with Quilombola women, local and national activists, about the daily struggles and confrontations of women - Quilombola territories and the relationship imposed between feminist movements in the country and in Latin America. It arises from questions and investigations arising from observations and interviews with quilombola women, references in their regions, from the community to the scenario of struggles of social movements, and reflects in the construction of public policies and social rights for rural quilombola and black women. The proposed methodology was for a Place of Listening. Open ears, heart and mind to record and dialogue about how the process of daily construction of politics and feminism among quilombola women takes place, in a practical exercise between oral history and participant observation, as an interviewer and subject to rights. We also sought to dialogue with bibliographic references and activists who brought us diverse feminist worldviews, such as black feminism, popular peasant feminism, and Latin American community feminism, as well as the writing, or orality of women who construct and elaborate public policies and community epistemologies in their daily lives.