ABSTRACT
The article seeks to reflect on gender relations in the dictatorial context as experienced by guerrilla women in order to build a dialogue between past, present and future to interpret the experiences lived by such women from a dialogical horizon and understand the disputes and tensions they were submitted to. The intention is to cover, through oral history, the diversity of spaces and times in which relations are inscribed both in the field of gender and in that of political struggle, since the experiences of guerrilla women are social, thus situated in the time/space.
KEYWORDS:
Gender; Women; Military Dictatorship; Oral History; Identity