Representações do Papel da Mulher no Seringal nas Narrativas Terra Caída e “Maibi”.
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Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
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This study aims to analyze the representations of women´s role in the novel Terra Caída in
dialogue with the short story "Maibi" and how gender issues were socially constructed from the
point of view of culture. Specifically, we analyze the relationship of human being in contact
with the rubber hostile environment, demystifying the construction of the Amazon "invented"
by the colonizers. We observe how the narrators transpose in the historical and social questions,
giving focus to the gender as social construction. We discuss women´s roles through a new
focus, seeking to emphasize the female protagonism and to verify how these roles were built
by the narrator´s discourse. As theoretical basis, we had as support Almeida (2008); Benchimol
(2009); Bourdieu (2012); Butler (2016); Costa (2013); Gondim (2007); Spivak (2010); Stuart
Hall (2014); Woolf (2014) and Wright Mills (1969). When we embarked on the discussion
about the representations of women´s role in the context of rubber, we focused on the analysis
of female characters such as Rosinha, Laura and Anália in Potyguara's work, and the character
Maibi in "Maibi", both describe the rubber period in the Amazon in the mid-nineteenth century.
The research sought to unveil the patriarchal, sexist and the socially constructed oppressive
heritage rebuilt in the family environment and propagated through generations, which caused
women invisibility besides preventing their rights. Thus, we say that women, regardless the
hostility of the rubber environment, has taken actions to demonstrate empowerment and
confrontation against the patriarchal order.