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Black skin, white coats: racism, body and ethics in anthropological fieldwork1 1 Earlier versions of the reflections in this article were presented at the "Sextas na Quinta" meetings of NAnSi - Núcleo de Antropologia Simétrica, of the Graduate Program in Social Anthropology of the Museu Nacional - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, on June 7, 2019 and at the Round Table "Health, race and racism", of the 3rd Health Anthropology Meeting, held between September 23 and 25, 2019 at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte.

ABSTRACT

During doctoral field research, I followed the work of a few White female doctors in their activities of conducting clinical research protocols. My presence in their offices was conditioned to the use of a white lab coat, which sometimes put me in a position to explain to patients that I was not a medical intern and, at other times, made explicit the limits of supposedly automatic confusions between me and a medical professional. By analyzing situations of gendered racism that I experienced during the fieldwork while wearing a white coat, I characterize medicine as a space marked by Whiteness and, extending this reflection to anthropology, I argue that ethical issues on anthropological fieldwork must necessarily take into account the racial and gender hierarchizations that make up interactions with research interlocutors - particular those experienced by Black female ethnographers in contexts where Whiteness is normalized.

KEYWORDS
Racism; body; fieldwork; ethics; medicine

Universidade de São Paulo - USP Departamento de Antropologia. Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas. Universidade de São Paulo. Prédio de Filosofia e Ciências Sociais - Sala 1062. Av. Prof. Luciano Gualberto, 315, Cidade Universitária. , Cep: 05508-900, São Paulo - SP / Brasil, Tel:+ 55 (11) 3091-3718 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
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