Abstract
Household employment has been historically configured as a space of colonial practices, crossed by hierarchies of gender, social class and ethnic-racial identities. A direct product of slavery and organized on the margins of labor relations, the profession is marked by social and economic prejudices. The social agent, the maid, was represented by the cinema and TV as secondary and subordinate , occupying a peripheral place and silenced by the relations of power that characterized the space of the bourgeois family. Recently some national films have discussed the place occupied by the maid within the home. From a reflection on spaces, territories and mobilities, we intend to address in this article two films that show the tensions in the relationship between maids and employers in the home / family, Que horas ela volta? and Aquarius.
Keywords housemaids; Brazilian cinema; mobility; visibility regimes