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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Let it not be that nursing that asks for silence: participation in social movements and sociopolitical-emancipatory knowledge
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2022;75(4):e20210630
04-15-2022
Resumo
ORIGINAL ARTICLELet it not be that nursing that asks for silence: participation in social movements and sociopolitical-emancipatory knowledge
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2022;75(4):e20210630
04-15-2022DOI 10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0630
Visualizações0Ver maisABSTRACT
Objectives:
to analyze the expression of sociopolitical-emancipatory knowledge, based on the participation of women-nurses in social movements, and the implications for nursing care.
Methods:
a research-interference, whose data were obtained from narrative interviews with six women-nurses inserted in social movements and with political representation. Data were submitted to discourse analysis, based on Michel Foucault.
Results:
women-nurses’ social and political involvement is driven by the contexts of life and work, marked by gender inequalities. Ability to criticize oneself, the profession and health policies and practices are presented as expressions of sociopolitical-emancipatory knowledge. Nursing care is conceived as a political practice that, influenced by learning from social movements, must go through a denial of the historically performed form.
Final Considerations:
participation in social movements triggers sociopolitical-emancipatory knowledge, resulting in differentiated care, a way of acting oriented towards reducing inequalities.
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REVISÃO
Politicy of care in the criticism towards gender stereotypes
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2016;69(6):1223-1230
01-01-2016
Resumo
REVISÃOPoliticy of care in the criticism towards gender stereotypes
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2016;69(6):1223-1230
01-01-2016DOI 10.1590/0034-7167-2016-0441
Visualizações0Ver maisABSTRACT
Objectives:
analyze gender inequalities among Brazilian women in Portugal and in contemporary nursing based on care politicity in the light of gender; disclose oppression of the female produced by the stereotypes that look upon women as natural caregivers; point out politicity to deconstruct gender stereotypes.
Method:
theoretical reflection with narrative review of literature to analyze classic references in the feminist epistemology combined with the care politicity thesis.
Results:
the similarities between the stereotypes of the Brazilian Eves and the Portuguese Maries as either the sexualized or sanctified nurse are inserted in the Jewish-Christian moral genealogy that reaffirms the subservience of the female to the male.
Conclusion:
by attaching priority to care that needs non-care to expand the possibilities of care giving, the theoretical assumption of politicy of care can contribute to subvert the stereotypical images of Brazilian women in Portuguese lands and in contemporary nursing.