O corpo que fala: a (im)possibilidade de regulação das novas experiências corporais pelo direito

The rationalism of the seventeenth century inaugurated a new way of thinking to establish that access to the world occurred through rationality. The individualist conception of society that emerged from the eighteenth century, despite having placed the subject in the center, made it from its psychic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lucas, Doglas Cesar, Copetti Ghisleni, Pâmela
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=5911051
Source:Revista de Direitos e Garantias Fundamentais, ISSN 2175-6058, Vol. 17, Nº. 2, 2016 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Revista de Direitos e Garantias Fundamentais), pags. 493-526
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Summary: The rationalism of the seventeenth century inaugurated a new way of thinking to establish that access to the world occurred through rationality. The individualist conception of society that emerged from the eighteenth century, despite having placed the subject in the center, made it from its psychic dimension, relegating the biological body to the second place. In this perspective, the emphasis is in the mind at the expense of meat. In the twentieth century however, Freud recalls the theme of the body to enter again the individual in his materialistic body. Therefore, it was restored and deepened the theme of meat, carcass, organic and biological body. Thus, the present study aims, from the hypothetical-deductive method, to analyze the (im)possibility of body regulation, especially the female one, by the contemporary law and its practical implications for women to, in the end, conclude that the body and their narratives are at the root of inequality and gender oppression.