dc.description.abstract | In 1484, the Inquisitors Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, authorized by Pope
Innocent VIII, published the manual of the Inquisition called Malleus Maleficarum, or
Hammer of Sorceresses. The book reveals relationships between sexuality and power,
which shape the functioning of society in accordance with maternal standards
established for the female bodies, making them submissive to the patriarchal political,
economic and social system. Thus, in the European society of the time, in the fifteenth
century, an imaginary that remained alive in the Brazilian society of the 21st century
was created. The research theorizes the relation between politics and religion, and its
influences in the elaboration of the normative framework of Brazil, when narrating the
historical contexts in which Malleus Maleficarum was developed, so that the influences
of this in the Brazilian Penal Code of 1940 are understood, which criminalizes the
practice of abortion in the Brazilian legal-political order. The present research shows
how politics and religion, especially Christianity, came together to oppress the bodies
of women, establishing them an ideal stereotype of the feminine, submissive and
maternal, which has a direct influence on the elaboration of punitive laws of the State,
especially with regard to the criminalization of abortion. Of exploratory nature, the work
required intense bibliographical research to the legal dispositions in force or constant
in the history of Brazil. Concepts based on human rights, individual freedoms and selfdetermination, expressed by international agreements, by feminist movements - and,
as a branch of it, by Feminist Theology - are used to provide a theoretical basis for
study. | eng |