Tells the stories of five militant feminist women who aided in the creation of a modern culture in revolutionary and postrevolutionary Mexico and, in some ways, Latin America as a whole. Based on original, pathbreaking research, Freethinkers and Labor Leaders demonstrates how five women transformed Latin American societyâ s ideas of citizenship, femininity, masculinity, and politics.
Tells the stories of five militant feminist women who aided in the creation of a modern culture in revolutionary and postrevolutionary Mexico and, in some ways, Latin America as a whole. Based on original, pathbreaking research, Freethinkers and Labor Leaders demonstrates how five women transformed Latin American societyâ s ideas of citizenship, femininity, masculinity, and politics.
María Teresa Fernández Aceves is a professor of social anthropology at Centro de Investigaciones en Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social–Occidente in Jalisco, Mexico. She is the author of a book in Spanish about women in twentieth-century Mexico.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction Chapter I. The “Modern Woman,” Politics, and the Mexican Revolution in Guadalajara, 1910-1917 Chapter II. Belén de Sárraga Hernández (1872-1950): Anticlericalism, Freethinkers and the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917) Chapter III. Atala Apodaca Anaya (1884-1977): Anticlericalism, Civic Education, Progressive Forces, and the Mexican Revolution Chapter IV. María Arcelia Díaz (1896-1939): Labor and Women’s Politics Within the Context of the Construction of the Post-Revolutionary State of Guadalajara Chapter V. María Guadalupe Martínez Villanueva (1906-2002): The Mobilization of Women and Corporatist Politics Chapter VI. Guadalupe Urzúa Flores (1912-2004): Advocate and Modernizer of Jalisco Rural Politics Epilogue Appendex Notes Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction Chapter I. The “Modern Woman,” Politics, and the Mexican Revolution in Guadalajara, 1910-1917 Chapter II. Belén de Sárraga Hernández (1872-1950): Anticlericalism, Freethinkers and the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917) Chapter III. Atala Apodaca Anaya (1884-1977): Anticlericalism, Civic Education, Progressive Forces, and the Mexican Revolution Chapter IV. María Arcelia Díaz (1896-1939): Labor and Women’s Politics Within the Context of the Construction of the Post-Revolutionary State of Guadalajara Chapter V. María Guadalupe Martínez Villanueva (1906-2002): The Mobilization of Women and Corporatist Politics Chapter VI. Guadalupe Urzúa Flores (1912-2004): Advocate and Modernizer of Jalisco Rural Politics Epilogue Appendex Notes Bibliography Index
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