This work has the objective to produce a study about the body andhow memories are inscribed on its spatial surface. Therefore, when thinking about thebody as a space, we have to specify which body is this to which we direct our research;as it is seen, described and understood within the historical and social context in whichit is found. Therefore, this dissertation is anchored in the female body seen andunderstood as subversive, but it is also dedicated to the study of these same bodies andtheir transformations in different temporalities. That is, a fixed and immutable temporaldelimitation does not fit in the work developed here, since the main support of theresearch is constituted by the memories of women who experienced the policy ofpersecution and torture put into practice during the Brazilian civil-military dictatorship(1964-1985), that because it is a relatively borderline event with the present, stillproduces reflections in the lives of women whose memories we will focus at. Inaddition, we treated how the violence was produced against the female bodily space and why certain spots of the bodies were affected and others were not, and, consequently,how the body submited to these violations responded. Another important aspect that wewill reflect on makes reference to these same bodies and their respective processes ofresistance and reconstruction. To this purpose, the analysis of archeogenealogicaldiscourse and quantitative history will be essential procedures during the developmentof the analysis of the countless statements, testimonies and interviews that were carriedout from the end of the 1990s to the present moment.