Quilombo Mulher: as vozes das Anguta de Turi Vimba em documentos sonoros do Projeto Cafundó
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the role of women in the formation of the Cafundó
Quilombo Community, a rural area in the municipality of Salto de Pirapora, São Paulo,
through the Matriarchs Dona Ifigênia Maria das Dores, Dona Benedita Pires Pedroso, and
Cida Aguiar. To do so, I seek to analyze the life trajectories of these Anguta women,
considering the territory as sacred land for the political bodies of black women, their ways
of being, belonging, knowledge, and ancestral marks in this Quilombo Mulher. In this
sense, I aim to understand their cultural references and the influences of their
sociocultural and symbolic universe on the present territory. I highlight the protagonism
of the matriarchs, who are responsible for preserving the lands, which have now been
returned to the community, and for preserving the language spoken by them, Cupópia, a
unique language developed by the group that combines African words such as Kimbundu,
Umbundu, and Portuguese caipira, thereby passing down the memory of Turi Vimba to
current generations. From a theoretical and methodological perspective, this is a
bibliographical and documentary research using selected sound archives and newspaper
articles, grounded in the works of Carlos Vogt and Peter Fry (VOGT; FRY, 2013), Lélia
Gonzales (GONZALES, 2020), Beatriz Nascimento (RATTS, 2006), and Glória Moura
(MOURA, 2012). The results point towards the recovery of ancestry and the memories of
the matriarchs in recording the history of the Cafundó Quilombo, reconstructing a part of
this past that still resonates in current generations.
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