Women, Culture, and Politics in Latin America

  Preface
  Notes on Contributors

  One—  Introduction:  Seminar on Women and Culture in Latin America
 expand sectionTwo—  Latin American Feminism and the Transnational Arena
 expand sectionThree—  Women, State, and Family in Latin American Literature of the 1920s
 expand sectionFour—  Women, Literature, and National Brotherhood
  Five—  The Modernization of Femininity: Argentina, 1916–1926
  Six—  Alfonsina Storni: The Tradition of the Feminine Subject
  Seven—  The Journalism of Alfonsina Storni: A New Approach to Women's History in Argentina
 expand sectionEight—  A Question of Blood: The Conflict of Sex and Class in the Autobiografía of Victoria Ocampo
 expand sectionNine—  Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz: Dreaming in a Double Voice
  Ten—  Toward a History of Women's Periodicals in Latin America: Introduction:  Seminar on Women and Culture in Latin America
 expand sectionEleven—  Toward a History of Women's Periodicals in Latin America: A Working Bibliography
 expand sectionTwelve—  Bibliographical Update: Women, Politics, and Culture in Latin America

 collapse sectionNotes
 Two— Latin American Feminism and the Transnational Arena
 Three— Women, State, and Family in Latin American Literature of the 1920s
 Four— Women, Literature, and National Brotherhood
 Five— The Modernization of Femininity: Argentina, 1916–1926
 Six— Alfonsina Storni: The Tradition of the Feminine Subject
 Seven— The Journalism of Alfonsina Storni: A New Approach to Women's History in Argentina
 Eight— A Question of Blood: The Conflict of Sex and Class in the Autobiografía of Victoria Ocampo
 Nine— Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz: Dreaming in a Double Voice
 expand sectionIndex

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