Abstract:
The study aims to problematize the mortification of black lives and enunciate tracks/residues of new imaginary generative memories, in poliphony voices of nursing working women which act in the front line of care and confrontation of COVID-19. We present a writing policy that’s soaked by the complementarity between reason and emotion. We go from the articulation between the concepts of escrevivência - as a political act of black women that seize writing; atrevivência - proposing a language sensed and vocalized; and oralitura - that uses memory as an oral and material afrodiasporic repertory that inscribes knowings, values, ways of being and ways to be in the world; as such, a escrevivência atrevivida in oralitura. Nursing’s black-bodies while in poliphony, denounces enimity policies in a necropolitic State and enunciate new imaginaries that instigate reinvention in pandemic times.
Keywords:
COVID-19; nursing; necropolitics; writing policies; escrevivência