Diálogos entre feminismo decolonial, fenomenologia e interseccionalidade para pensar a ação clínica e a escuta psicológica de mulheres racializadas
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12957/ek.2024.89101Abstract
This article discusses the existence of racialized women and the importance of developing clinical listening and action committed to their demands. From the understanding that body is simultaneously singular and plural territory, it acts as intersectionality, phenomenological thinking and Decolonial Feminism are important theoretical and methodological lenses that can contribute to the psychological clinical action for listening to women who are at the base of the social pyramid of the capitalist system. Through a fundamental analysis of capitalism, it is demonstrated that racism and patriarchy are the origins of capitalism. Initial thoughts are centered around the contribution of phenomenological thinking, in dialogue with other approaches, to the care of individuals who are subjected to daily violence by the various spheres maintaining the capitalist system. Clinical action is suggested as a strategy to fragment colonization technologies in capitalism, as it favors the symbolic and existential organization of racialized women through their testimony and validation of their pain. The conclusion is that qualified psychological listening can encourage criticism of the technologies that reproduce structural violence that silence and take away women's freedom. It can also create care and freedom by acknowledging voices, suffering, and creative possibilities for self-determination of these women and the construction of other worlds. Lastly, it suggests a replacement for the conventional psychological clinic.
Keywords: existence; women; racialization; intersectionality; phenomenology; decolonial feminism.