Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-1074-6 • Hardback • April 2002 • $154.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7425-1075-3 • Paperback • March 2002 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4616-4203-9 • eBook • March 2002 • $59.50 • (£46.00)
Jennifer Abbassi is associate professor of political science and chair of the International Studies program at Randolph-Macon Woman's College. Sheryl L. Lutjens is professor and director of the Women's Studies Program at California State University, San Marcos.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Theory, Themes and the Realities of Gender in Latin America
Part 2 Women, Work, and Development
Chapter 3 Introduction to Part I: Selections from "Women, Development, and Anthropological Facts and Fictions," by Eleanor Leacock ; Selections from "Approaches to Understanding the Position of Women in the Informal Sector," by Tamar Diana Wilson
Chapter 4 Economic Restructuring and Gender Subordination
Chapter 5 The Urban Family and Poverty in Latin America
Chapter 6 The Myth of Being 'Like a Daughter'
Chapter 7 Women in Mexico's Popular Movements: Survival Strategies against Ecological and Economic Impoverishment
Chapter 8 Caribbean Transnationalism As a Gendered Process
Part 9 Politics, Policies, and the State
Chapter 10 Introduction to Part II: Selection from "Mobilizing Women: Revolution in the Revolution," by Norma Stoltz Chinchilla; Selection from "Gender Equality in the Salvadoran Transition," by Ilja A. Luciak
Chapter 11 Chilean Women's Organizations and Their Potential for Change
Chapter 12 El Comité de Amas de Casa de Siglo XX: An Organizational Experience of Bolivian Women
Chapter 13 The Mother of the Nicaraguans: Doña Violeta and the UNO's Gender Agenda
Chapter 14 Constructing and Negotiating Gender in Women's Police Stations in Brazil
Chapter 15 Reading Between the Lines: Women, the State, and Rectification in Cuba
Chapter 16 Seeking Our Own Food: Indigenous Women's Power and Autonomy in San Pedro, Chenalhó, Chiapas (1980-1998)
Part 17 Culture, History, and Feminisms
Chapter 18 Introduction to Part III: Selections from "Women, Class, and Education in Mexico, 1880-1928," by Mary K. Vaughan; Selections from "Reclaiming Voices: Notice On a New Female Practice in Journalism," by Margaret Randall
Chapter 19 Story Without Words: Women and the Creation of a Mestizo People in Guayaquil, 1820-1835
Chapter 20 Brazilian Women in Exile: The Quest for an Identity
Chapter 21 Remembering the Dead: Latin American Women's "Testimonial" Discourse
Chapter 22 Roger Sanchez's 'Humor Erotico' and the Semana Cronica: A Sexual Revolution in Sandinista Nicaragua?
Chapter 23 Evita: The Globalization of a National Myth
Chapter 24 Annotated Index of Articles on Women and Gender in Latin American Perspectives
Classic readings are enhanced by:
-A rich introductory chapter that frames the readings and identifies trends in the theory and practice of women/gender and the political economy of development
-Focused introductions and bibliographies to each part
-Essays that cover a range of countries and research strategies, with a particular concern for local conditions and developments
-Side-bar excerpts that enhance the main essays
-An annotated bibliography of all articles published on women/gender over the 27-year history of Latin American Perspectives