Míriam Martinho
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Míriam Martinho (born 1954) is one of the leading
feminists Feminism is a range of socio-political movements and ideology, ideologies that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social gender equality, equality of the sexes. Feminism holds the position that modern soci ...
in Brazil and part of the second generation of feminist journalists, who emerged in the 1980s. She was one of the first people to bring lesbianism openly into the fold of feminism and founded one of the first Lesbian-Feminist organizations in the country. She and
Rosely Roth Rosely Roth (August 21, 1959 in São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil – August 28, 1990 in São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil) is considered one of the pioneers in the history of the LGBT movement of Brazil (known in Portuguese as the ''Movimento Homosex ...
gained recognition for staging a protest, known at the "Brazilian Stonewall" at Ferro's Bar in 1983. She has written for numerous LGBT and feminist journals and has submitted expert testimony on the state of the LGBT community in Brazil.


Biography

Míriam Martinho was born in 1954 in
Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the capital of the Rio de Janeiro (state), state of Rio de Janeiro. It is the List of cities in Brazil by population, second-most-populous city in Brazil (after São Paulo) and the Largest cities in the America ...
and grew up in the city of
São Paulo São Paulo (; ; Portuguese for 'Paul the Apostle, Saint Paul') is the capital of the São Paulo (state), state of São Paulo, as well as the List of cities in Brazil by population, most populous city in Brazil, the List of largest cities in the ...
. She is one of the pioneering figures of
feminism in Brazil The origins of feminism in Brazil trace back to the 19th century. During the Empire of Brazil, some jurists attempted to legalize women's suffrage, with or without the consent of the husband. Later, the republican constitution of 1891 did not ...
and the Brazilian Homosexual Movement. The feminist movement in Brazil, became fairly active in 1975. After the II Congress of the Paulista Women there was a split between leftist leaders and feminists. At that time, feminists were supporting the concept of gender, rather than class, as a focus for political empowerment and equality. The schism resulted in the feminists moving forward on their own and a flurry of magazines and critical thought on feminism emerged. Many feminist organizations were founded each with specific themes: education, health, political empowerment, sexuality, violence, among others. Martinho was part of this movement, founding the first lesbian feminist group, ''Grupo Lésbico-Feminista'', in 1979. In 1981 the group disbanded and part of the members went on to form the ''Grupo Ação Lésbica-Feminista'' (GALF), the most active of whom were Martinho and
Rosely Roth Rosely Roth (August 21, 1959 in São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil – August 28, 1990 in São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil) is considered one of the pioneers in the history of the LGBT movement of Brazil (known in Portuguese as the ''Movimento Homosex ...
. In 1989, GALF reformed, as an NGO called ''Um Outro Olhar''. In 1981, Martinho began producing an activist newspaper called ''"ChanacomChana"'' as the voice of GALF. Sometimes it was produced triannually and sometimes quarterly, but it circulated through the 1980s. It was the first journal to expand the idea of including lesbians in the feminist movement, which was seen as very radical at the time. In 1989, when GALF was formed as an NGO, the journal changed its name to coincide with that of the NGO, "Um Outro Olhar" and it primary began to focus on LGBT issues with feminism as a secondary focus. The publication ''"ChanacomChana"'' was directly responsible for the event that has been called the "Brazilian Stonewall". On 19 August 1983, a protest was held against Ferro's Bar, known for its lesbian clientele, in São Paulo, because they refused to allow ''ChanacomChana'' to be distributed. Martinho and Roth staged a demonstration, calling together artists, intellectuals and lawyers, to protest. According to Martinho, the difficulty started almost a month earlier when the owners ejected she and Roth for trying to distribute the paper in the bar. There was a physical altercation and they were banned from distributing the paper. They planned the demonstration to protest the ban and got a lot of press coverage because their approach was pro-active and non-violent, but also because they were open about fighting for their rights in a time when many lesbians were in hiding. After the protest, the bar developed an even larger lesbian following. Since the 1990s, Martinho has been involved in an endeavor to improve the health care provided to women, but especially lesbians. As many of them do not disclose their status to health practitioners, she feels they are extremely vulnerable. In 2003, she presented research for periodic review of the state of the LGBT population in Brazil. Her report was highlighted by the US State Department and the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada in their evaluation. Martinho works as a journalist and serves at the editor in chief of the websites Umoutroolhar and Contraocorodoscontentes two of the most important portals of Intelligentsia
Lesbian A lesbian is a homosexual woman or girl. The word is also used for women in relation to their sexual identity or sexual behavior, regardless of sexual orientation, or as an adjective to characterize or associate nouns with female homosexu ...
in Brazil.


Honors

* Ninth Conference Internacional do Serviço de Informação Lesbian International-ILIS. Geneva, Switzerland 28 al March 31, 1986 * I Encontro Lesbian-Feminist Latin-American and Caribbean do. Taxco, Mexico, 1987 * Reunião of Reflexão Lesbian-Homossexual. Santiago, Chile, November 1992


Selected works

* Martinho, Míriam. “As lésbicas também são gays,” ''Boletim do Grupo Gay da Bahia'' Vol. 6, No. 12: Brazil (1986) p 1 (In Portuguese) * Martinho, Míriam. “1979-1989: 10 Anos de Movimentação Lésbica no Brasil”, ''Um Ooutro Olhar'' Vol. 9: Brazil (1990), pp 8–17 (In Portuguese) * Martinho, Mírian. “Lésbicas Em Borinquen: III Encontro de Lésbicas Feministas Latino-Americanas e do Caribe” ''Um Outro Olhar'' Vol. 19/20 No. 7: Brazil (Fall/Winter 1993) pp 24–26 * Martinho, Míriam. ''Prazer sem Medo: informçôes para mulheres que transam com mujeres'', Rede de Informaçâo Um Outro Olhar: São Paulo, Brazil (1995) (In Portuguese) (In Portuguese) * Martinho, Míriam. "Lesbian Life Today" pp 13–23 in Rosenbloom, Rachel. (Editor) ''Unspoken Rules: Sexual Orientation and Women's Human Rights'', Cassell Publishing: London (1996) (in English) () * Martinho Rodrigues, Míriam. ''IX Encontro Brasileiro de Gays, Lésbicas e Travestis = II Encontro Brasileiro de Gays, Lésbicas e Travestus que Trabalham com AIDS'', Rede de Informação Um Outro Olhar: São Paulo, Brazil (1998) (In Portuguese) * Martinho, Míriam. ''A brief history of the Lesbian Movement in Brazil'' IGLHRC: Brazil (2003) (in English


Further reading


History of Feminism in Brazil (in Portuguese)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Martinho, Miriam 1954 births Living people Brazilian feminist writers Brazilian women's rights activists Brazilian lesbian writers Brazilian non-fiction writers Lesbian journalists Brazilian LGBTQ journalists Brazilian LGBTQ rights activists 20th-century Brazilian women writers 21st-century Brazilian women writers Women civil rights activists