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The CPFL Philosophical Café is an open space for reflection. The speeches of the guests and the comments of the audience are the responsibility of their respective authors and do not reflect the views of the CPFL Institute or its controllers. Comments that are not on the proposed topic and that disseminate hate speech and/or criminal attacks will be automatically banned. Over time, psychological trauma has often been associated with extraordinary situations that mark a person's history before and after, such as violence, serious accidents or negligence. The more modern science of trauma advances, the more we recognize it as prevalent among us and also as a result of everyday experiences that are easily experienced by anyone. From illnesses of ourselves and those of our loved ones to relationship patterns, there are many possibilities for a person to experience trauma. When we think of trauma as an experience that is part of the human experience, we shed light on countless traumatic experiences that are made impossible on a daily basis. In this group, historical and transgenerational traumas stand out: those that are not located solely in a person's specific biography, but result from the person's exposure to stressful experiences due to the group to which they belong. When these experiences involve prejudices, stereotypes and discrimination that have not been integrated into the collective consciousness, in addition to being lived, they are transmitted from one generation to the next. In a gender perspective, historical and transgenerational trauma affects women on a daily basis. It presents itself in both subtle and almost imperceptible forms as well as in explicit forms of subjugation. But just as trauma is part of life, repair is also part of it, and traumatic experience is not a life sentence. Shedding light on historical and transgenerational traumas experienced by women is an important step towards the connections that allow access to the power that may have been hidden by pain. Lecture from the module New Women, Old Roles Curated by Luna Lobão, historian, scriptwriter and curator We have experienced many social and cultural transformations in relation to women throughout history. Gender equality, taking up space in the workplace, in politics, recognition of the invisible work of caring... these are some of the achievements and rights that women have been achieving at the cost of many struggles and positions. Women reinvent themselves, rethink themselves, empower themselves. They are undeniably new women, seeking new spaces and freedoms. But even today there is resistance and obstacles. How have society and institutions dealt with all of this? How do women themselves relate to the path to success? Do we believe that we are capable and deserving? And also: how much of these achievements and desires are in fact ours today, and how much are dreams and traumas carried by our ancestors? New women, old roles - curated by a woman who invites female speakers who propose to think about today's women, the rewriting of history through a female lens, future possibilities and everything that no longer fits into the gender issue. Subscribe to the channel and click the bell to be notified of news! Follow TV Cultura on social media! Facebook: / tvcultura Twitter: / tvcultura Instagram: / tvcultura Website: https://tvcultura.com.br/ Follow Instituto CPFL Facebook: / institutocpfl Twitter: / cafe_filosofico Website: http://www.institutocpfl.org.br/ #women #feminine #feminines #woman #trauma #traumas #femininetrauma #reparation #historicalreparation #potency #potentwomen #potent