Lourdes Teodoro (born 4 June 1946) is an Afro-Brazilian academic, writer, poet and psychoanalyst. She studies the effects of colonization on identity.
Maria de Lourdes Teodoro was born on 4 June 1946 in Formosa, Goiás, Brazil. In 1958, with the founding of BrasÃÂlia, her family relocated there, where she completed her secondary education. From her youth, she began publishing poems in student journals and newspapers, including Correio Braziliense, and with a group of other students published the Antologia de Alunos Escritores do Elefante Branco (Anthology of Student Writers of the White Elephant) in 1966. After graduating from the University of BrasÃÂlia with a degree in literature, she began teaching French and Literature at Centro Universitário de BrasÃÂlia. In 1980, she began work on a doctorate at in Paris on Comparative Literature, graduating in 1984 with a dissertation entitled Identités antillaise et brésilienne àtravers les oeuvres d'Aimé Césaire et de Mario de Andrade (Antillian and Brazilian identities through the works of Aimé Césaire and Mário de Andrade). The work, like many of her tracts, evaluates the effects of slavery and racism on Afro-Brazilians.
After returning to Brazil, Teodoro taught as an adjunct Professor at the Arts Institute of the University of BrasÃÂlia. In 1991 she began offering lectures in Africa, participating in seminars in Angola and Senegal. She helped with the founding of the Institute of Black Peoples in Burkino Faso, before moving to the United States. In 1996 Teodoro began graduate studies at Harvard University in African-American studies and psychoanalysis, which she completed in 1998. Her post-doctoral internship in childhood and adolescence psychopathology was completed at the psychiatry clinic of the University Hospital of BrasÃÂlia.
Teodoro currently conducts academic research at the Instituto de Pesquisas e Estudos Afro-brasileiras (Institute for Research and Afro Brazilian Studies) in Rio de Janeiro and is practicing psychoanalyst. She is a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association and an associate member of the BrasÃÂlia Psychoanalytic Society.