GOMES. S. S.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6020077723540034; Gomes, Suelen Silva.
Resumen:
This study is based on analyzing the trajectory and also the naturalization of
domestic violence against women, highlighting its historical evolution and its
relationship with social, cultural and economic transformations. Furthermore, it emphasizes
the importance of the Maria da Penha Law, sanctioned in 2006, as a landmark
significant in the development of violence prevention strategies. However,
it is argued that the objectives of this law can only be fully achieved
through a strategy that goes to the root of the problem, that is, through
transformation of class society, which is based on different forms of
oppression to maintain its hegemonic power. The objective is to understand the
naturalization of violence suffered by women with particularities in the space
domestic, analyze its forms of expression and impacts on society, as well as
identify the forms of naturalization of this type of violence This study adopts
a qualitative research methodology, based on an extensive review
bibliographical. The analysis included scientific articles, books and dissertations previously
published on the topic within Marxist feminist literature. In this wake, for
expository purposes, it is highlighted that this was divided into two moments, namely: in the
Firstly, the perpetuation of violence in the context of
patriarchy, considering it a fundamental structure in the oppression of women.
At this point, we point out how domestic violence constitutes one of the
expressions of the social issue in Brazil, related to the current mode of production
economy that founds our economic-social formation, where the overlap or
“in” between class, gender and race has always been an essential mechanism used
by the Brazilian capitalist-patriarchal mode of production to maintain domination and
power of the bourgeois class. In the second chapter, the naturalization of
violence, highlighting the submission imposed on women and the veiled violence
present in the media, the political scene, music and social jargon. Through
of this theoretical-methodological framework, we aim not only to deepen the
knowledge on the topic, but also promote practices and policies that
favor the construction of a society where there is no form of
violence and oppression, where all women can be truly free.