Women, Culture, and Politics in Latin America |
Preface |
Notes on Contributors |
One— Introduction: Seminar on Women and Culture in Latin America |
![]() | 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 |
• | Women and La Historia Oficial |
• | The Nation As "Imagined Community" |
• | Women As National Icons: Mármol, Gorriti, and Manuela Rosas |
• | The 1920S and 1930S: The Country and The City |
• | Indigenismo , The Madre Indígena , and The Women of Amauta |
• | Gender, Race, and Nation in the Poema de Chile |
• | Conclusion: Literary History As Dialogue |
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 |
Ten— Toward a History of Women's Periodicals in Latin America: Introduction: Seminar on Women and Culture in Latin America |
![]() | Eleven— Toward a History of Women's Periodicals in Latin America: A Working Bibliography |
![]() | Twelve— Bibliographical Update: Women, Politics, and Culture in Latin America |
![]() | Notes |
![]() | Index |