Ciência_Iscte
Publications
Publication Detailed Description
Modern, skilled, entrepreneurs: Is there a “new” discourse about Brazilian women in the Portuguese media?
Book Title
Changing lusospheres: Europe, Brazil, Africa. On old and new connections between centers and peripheries
Year (definitive publication)
2025
Language
English
Country
Luxembourg
More Information
Web of Science®
This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®
Scopus
This publication is not indexed in Scopus
Google Scholar
This publication is not indexed in Google Scholar
This publication is not indexed in Overton
Abstract
In the last three decades (since the 1990s), Brazilian immigration to Portugal has been studied intensively from both the Brazilian and the Portuguese perspective (Finotelli et al. 2013; Malheiros 2007; Padilla et al.
2015). It was mainly the work of Brazilian anthropologists FeldmanBianco (1997) and Machado (1999) that opened up this research field in
the 1990s.The first decade of the 2000s witnessed a notable transformation of the composition of the flows of migrants and of the Brazilian community in the country. This shift coincided with a new reality: the growing number of women, aligning with what is commonly referred to in the
literature as the feminization of migration (Padilla 2007a). Hence, during
this time, special attention was paid to addressing the stereotypes, hypersexualization, and stigmatization dynamics surrounding these women,
which was having a strong impact on their integration into local society
(Gomes 2013; Pontes 2004). Thus, since then, the Portuguese media has
played an important role in reproducing and highlighting discourses that
portrayed them as exotic, sensual, submissive, inferior, and sexually
available.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Português