{"id":4689,"date":"2025-11-24T12:17:36","date_gmt":"2025-11-24T15:17:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.djamilaribeiro.com.br\/consciencia-negra-onde-toni-morrison-encontra-carolina-maria-de-jesus\/"},"modified":"2025-12-01T10:52:12","modified_gmt":"2025-12-01T13:52:12","slug":"black-consciousness-toni-morrison-meets-carolina-maria-de-jesus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.djamilaribeiro.com.br\/en\/black-consciousness-toni-morrison-meets-carolina-maria-de-jesus\/","title":{"rendered":"Black Consciousness: Where Toni Morrison Meets Carolina Maria de Jesus"},"content":{"rendered":"

*Content translated with artificial intelligence*<\/strong><\/p>\n

How Djamila Ribeiro Turns Her Education into a Public Legacy<\/em><\/p>\n

On Chibar\u00e1s Avenue, in the Moema neighborhood of S\u00e3o Paulo, there is a space where geography dissolves into bookshelves. There, African American author Toni Morrison \u2014 the first Black woman to win the Nobel Prize \u2014 “converses” with Brazilian writer Carolina Maria de Jesus. The library is more than a collection; it\u2019s a deliberate gathering of knowledge systems long kept at the margins of literary canons. At the Instituto Feminismos Plurais, led by Djamila Ribeiro, this curatorship is not decorative \u2014 it’s a tool for building the future by connecting past and present.<\/p>\n

From Reader in Santos to Founder in S\u00e3o Paulo<\/strong><\/p>\n

The existence of the Toni Morrison Library is, above all, an act of historical retribution. Decades before becoming a best-selling author and visiting professor at MIT, Djamila Ribeiro had her worldview shaped in a library \u2014 the one at Casa de Cultura da Mulher Negra in Santos, named after Carolina Maria de Jesus. It was there that the Brazilian philosopher encountered the words that helped her make sense of her own reality.<\/p>\n

“She\u2019s an author I discovered in late adolescence. I worked at an organization called Casa de Cultura da Mulher Negra in Santos. Even though I came from a background of activism \u2014 my father was an activist \u2014 I didn\u2019t know Carolina. I only discovered her because that organization had a library named after her,” Djamila revealed in an interview with O Estado de S. Paulo<\/em><\/a> <\/strong>on November 20.<\/p>\n

Today, the cycle comes full circle. By keeping the doors of her own library open in S\u00e3o Paulo, Djamila transforms her individual journey into collective infrastructure. The space was designed to offer what is often denied to much of Brazil’s Black and peripheral population: not just access to books, but the right to silence, internet access, and a welcoming roof for those who wish to study all day.<\/p>\n

“Thinking about antiracist actions necessarily involves creating spaces where knowledge can be shared. That\u2019s how we understand this initiative \u2014 but also as a space of care: for many people, depending on their social position, a quiet place to study is fundamental,” she wrote in an Instagram post on Black Consciousness Day, November 21.<\/p>\n

The Curatorship: An Intellectual Lineage<\/strong><\/p>\n

The selection of works reflects what Djamila calls essential references. Visitors will find the piercing poetry of Audre Lorde, the sensibility of Concei\u00e7\u00e3o Evaristo, and the philosophy of bell hooks and Simone de Beauvoir. The collection materializes the bridge that the now MIT professor builds in her career: connecting Brazilian critical thought with the world \u2014 as seen in her intellectual exchange and friendship with Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.<\/p>\n

A Space for Belonging<\/strong><\/p>\n

More than a place of transit, the library is an invitation to stay. With a book club (“Women Who Write”), computers, and free internet access, the space reinforces the mission of Espa\u00e7o Feminismos Plurais to democratize reading. While Djamila takes Brazilian thought beyond national borders, the Toni Morrison Library ensures that in S\u00e3o Paulo, the legacy of these women remains accessible, alive, and \u2014 above all \u2014 open.<\/p>\n

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Uma publica\u00e7\u00e3o compartilhada por Djamila Ribeiro (@djamilaribeiro1)<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n