Sexuality and Marriage in Colonial Latin America. Asuncion LavrinBetween Civilization and Barbarism: Women, Nation and Literary Culture in Modern Argentina. Francine MasielloTalking Back: Toward a Latin American Feminist Literary Criticism. Debra CastilloReading the Body Politic: Feminist Criticism and Latin American Women Writers. Amy K. Kaminsky

Signs ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 746-752
Author(s):  
Sara Castro-Klaren
Author(s):  
Elizabeth S. Manley

Chapter 4 addresses three inter-related strategies employed by women following the demise of the Trujillato to reconstruct the body politic in the face of drastic political transition, a second U.S. occupation, and general social upheaval. First, Dominican women again called on the rhetoric of motherhood and maternalism in support of a return to domestic tranquility and for a nation free of dictatorial politics and foreign meddling. Second, political participation by women served to demonstrate a re-envisioning of the nature of Dominican politics through their burgeoning support of full gendered equality. Third, as now long-term members of a number of inter-American organizations, women called for continental solidarity to return sovereignty to Latin American nations plagued by foreign intervention, particularly their own. These strategies demonstrate both the potential for maternal politics as a form of national healing as well is its limitations for creating true gender equity.


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