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- Title
Interview with Deivison Faustino conducted by Paula Gaudenzi and Wania Cidade.
- Authors
Gaudenzi, Paula; Ferreira Cidade, Wania Maria Coelho; Faustino, Deivison Mendes
- Abstract
Deivison, this interview is meant to build a Dossier on "Blackness and Subjectivity", contemplating the subjective effects of racism, mainly on black women, as well as on the production of care. This Journal belongs to the field of Collective Health, so the issues of suffering, illness, and care are very important to us. One fact that caught our attention and that it would be a good place to start our talk, it's is that your professional career is heavily crisscrossed by the discussion of racism, as well as by the field of health, primarily mental health. You are a sociologist, your Master's degree was at the ABC Medical School, where you were interested in understanding how the black movement in ABC Paulista region was sensitive to the issue of the health of the black population, and your post-Doc was in Clinical Psychology at USP. We understand that your path as a sociologist, one who delves into the field of health, especially the psyche, is related to your concern regarding the harmful effects of racism and the understanding that confronting it is necessarily done through political and psychic paths. This is the conviction of the Amma Psique & Negritude Institute, of which you are the pedagogical coordinator. So, could you start by talking a little about your Master's and Post-doctoral studies. What was your interest in both surveys? What were the findings? And why did you, being a sociologist, do your Master's research within the School of Medicine? Moreover, what path did you take until you reached subjectivity studies, to the point of taking on a post-doctoral degree in Clinical Psychology.
- Subjects
MASTER'S degree; CLINICAL psychology; POSTDOCTORAL programs; BLACK people; MENTAL health; BLACK children
- Publication
Revista Ciência & Saúde Coletiva, 2023, Vol 28, Issue 9, p2519
- ISSN
1413-8123
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1590/1413-81232023289.08442022EN