Um olhar de gênero sobre a trajetória de vida de Frida Maria Strandberg (1891 -1940)
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Tipo
Tese
Data de publicação
2016-08-18
Periódico
Citações (Scopus)
Autores
Vilhena, Valéria Cristina
Orientador
Souza Neto, João Clemente de
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Membros da banca
Campos, Leonildo Silveira
Schwartz, Rosana Maria Pires Barbato
Nunes, Maria José Fontelas Rosado
Brabo, Tânia Suely Antonelli Marcelino
Schwartz, Rosana Maria Pires Barbato
Nunes, Maria José Fontelas Rosado
Brabo, Tânia Suely Antonelli Marcelino
Programa
Educação, Arte e História da Cultura
Resumo
This thesis is the result of research carried out about Frida Maria Strandberg
(1891-1940), a Swedish missionary sent to Brazil by the Philadelphia Church in
Stockholm in 1917, who helped in the expansion of the Brazilian Pentecostal
movement, which resulted in the movement of the Assemblies of God. In Brazil,
Frida married, had children, and worked with churches in the north of the
country, moving to the Southeast when, with her husband Gunnar Vingren, she
started the Assemblies of God in Rio de Janeiro. In 1932, the family returned to
Sweden. A few months later her husband died. She tried to return to Brazil, but
was prevented from doing so. She was hospitalized in psychiatric hospitals,
dying in 1940. Since then, for 80 years there has been a process of forgetting
Frida and her work in Brazil. Therefore, this text looks to evaluate, in the light of
gender studies, her life story, and the pressure that was placed on her in a
context of male domination over women. The consequence of this process of
symbolic violence has been the erasing of Frida and her history, for decades,
from the history of the Brazilian Assemblies of God.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Frida Maria Strandberg , assembleia de Deus , feminismo , gênero , trajetórias de vida
Assuntos Scopus
Citação
VILHENA, Valéria Cristina. Um olhar de gênero sobre a trajetória de vida de Frida Maria Strandberg (1891 -1940). 2016. 263 f. Tese (Educação, Arte e História da Cultura) - Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie, São Paulo.