Nísia Floresta

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This Element presents the philosophical contributions of Nísia Floresta, a feminist philosopher of education from the 19th century in early post-colonial Brazil, who defended abolition and indigenous rights. Focusing on five central works (Direitos, Lágrima, Opúsculo, Páginas, and Woman), it shows them connected by a critique of colonialism grounded on feminist principles. Influenced by the practical Cartesianism of Poulain de la Barre through the pamphlets of Sophia, Floresta applies to the social structures the feminist principle that reason has no gender, arguing that a nation's civilizational level depends on whether natural equality is expressed in terms of social rights. Describing the suffering experienced by women, indigenous people, and the black enslaved population, she defends education as a strategy against colonialism. As such, education should aim towards physical and intellectual emancipation, restoring the lost dignity of individuals. Floresta's works thus foreground slavery and colonization as events that shaped philosophical modernity.

Author(s): Nastassja Pugliese
Series: Elements on Women in the History of Philosophy
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
City: Cambridge

Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Nísia Floresta
Contents
1 A Woman Philosopher in Postcolonial Brazil
2 Beyond the “Brazilian Wollstonecraft” Myth
3 Floresta: Translator of the Anonymous Sophia and Author of Her Own Vindicatory Works
3.1 A lágrima de um caeté (1849)
3.2 Páginas de uma vida obscura (1854)
3.3 Opúsculo humanitário (1853)
3.4 Woman (1859)
4 Equality: From Naturally Given to a Measure of Social Justice
5 The Colonialist Principle: Instrumentalization of Suffering as a Strategy of Domination
6 Dignity as True Liberation: Educating for Physical and Intellectual Emancipation
7 Locating Floresta in the History of Philosophy
References