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Modes of (R)existence in Brazilian Traditional Cultures: Ancestry and Queerness in the Subversive Performance of the Carimbó Cobra Venenosa

Based on collaborative research on the Carimbo Cobra Venenosa group, this article discusses how traditional expressions are shaped by LGBTQIA+ performers and how perceptions of the LGBTQIA+ community are potentially altered when feminist and queer artists perform traditional folk genres. Carimbo is...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of folklore research 2023-05, Vol.60 (2), p.166-195
Main Authors: Muniagurria, Lorena Avellar de, Cobra, Priscila
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Based on collaborative research on the Carimbo Cobra Venenosa group, this article discusses how traditional expressions are shaped by LGBTQIA+ performers and how perceptions of the LGBTQIA+ community are potentially altered when feminist and queer artists perform traditional folk genres. Carimbo is a form of music, dance, and sociability typical of the state of Para (Amazonia, Northern Brazil). Although it has historically been a source of Black and popular subaltern resistance, it has also been structured by sexist, binary, and heteronormative perspectives. Cobra Venenosa is a carimbo group that invests in a subversive performance in which LGBTQIA+ activism is key. Cobra's aesthetic and political choices are characteristic of contemporary performative arts and artivism. However, the ensemble claims to be pau e corda--a vernacular category referring to carimbo traditional styles. Cobra's insistence on simultaneously occupying these two places challenges the limits of traditional carimbo from within. This article contributes to the visibility of feminist and queer experiences in the universe of traditional cultures, revealing the presence of distinct values, practices, subjects, and conflicts. It dialogues with feminist, queer, intersectional, and decolonial studies, and points to potential theoretical and analytical gains resulting from the study of nonconformant cases.
ISSN:0737-7037
1543-0413
1543-0413
DOI:10.2979/jfr.2023.a912093