HOW TO SLOWLY KILL YOURSELF AND KEEP ON LIVING?
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Abstract
In this essay, presents a reflection on how black men complexly inscribe their ways of expressing feelings and affections as discursivities about the self, expanding its use to other modalities of interaction and perception of narratives about emotionalities. Discusses ways of thinking about these narratives about themselves among black men outside the power and non-power dichotomy and point to a way of talking about loneliness as a constitutive element of relationships. Speaks the use of the term loneliness as a synonym for social isolation and stipulation, from a religious image, a place to think about how we should resist the mechanisms of social and emotional isolation experienced in relationship crisis contexts, be it affective-sexual relationships, be the political-social relationships existing in the public sphere.
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