Carmen da Silva


Carmen da Silva was a Brazilian psychoanalyst and journalist, forerunner of the feminism in Brazil. She has been considered "a symbol of modernization of the press and of the contemporary Brazilian society". Together with other Brazilian female intellectuals, she was a pioneer in addressing and writing about the "woman question" or the women's condition in Brazilian society.

Biography

Da Silva was born in Rio Grande, Rio Grande do Sul. Once she started working as a journalist, she began to popularize feminism in Brazil through her articles in magazines with wide female readership. Between 1963 and 1984, uninterruptedly, she wrote the column "A arte de ser mulher" in Editora Abril's Revista ''Claudia'' magazine. The column foredated some of the issues later appropriated by the Brazilian feminists, like use of pill, inclusion of women in labour market and divorce, among others.
Da Silva's activism was notable because the feminist agenda did not receive support from among those who toppled the dictatorship due to the idea that women's rights undermined the general political struggle. Da Silva worked to ensure that women's condition and rights received more media coverage. For instance, she published criticisms on issues such as the requirement for virginity only on women as well as violence against women. Her efforts alongside the works of other feminist journalists such as Irede Cardoso and Maria Carneiro da Cunha, pressured newspaper and broadcast networks to expand the media spaces reserved for women's voices and women's issues. Her crusade in fighting prejudices in the newsrooms was documented in Helen de Paiva Ramos' accounts of the women who helped change Brazilian journalism.

Works

A Arte de Ser Mulher - Um Guia Moderno Para o Seu Comportamento, 1967O Homem e a Mulher no Mundo Moderno, 1969Sangue sem dono, 1984Histórias Híbridas de uma Senhora de Respeito, 1984

Anthology

  • CIVITTA, Laura. O melhor de Carmen da Silva, 1994.