Combines Marxist and postmodern approaches to argue that patriarchy has provided the central organizing principle of Nicaraguan agrarian labor systems.
Combines Marxist and postmodern approaches to argue that patriarchy has provided the central organizing principle of Nicaraguan agrarian labor systems.
Elizabeth Dore is Reader in Latin American History at the University of Southampton. She is the author of The Peruvian Mining Industry: Growth, Stagnation, and Crisis; the editor of Gender Politics in Latin America: Debates in Theory and Practice; and a coeditor of Hidden Histories of Gender and the State in Latin America, also published by Duke University Press.
Inhaltsangabe
2. Indians under Colonialism and Postcolonialism 33 3. Patriarchal Power in the Pueblos 53 4. The Private Property Revolution 69 5. Gendered Contradictions of Liberalism: Ethnicity, Property, and Households 97 6. Debt Peonage in Diriomo: Forced Labor Revisited 110 7. Patriarchy and Peonage 149 Conclusion 164 Epilogue: History Matters—The Sandinistas’ Myth of Modernity 172 Notes 181 Glossary 213 Bibliography 217 Acknowledgments xi Introduction: Who Controls the Past Controls the Future 1 1. Theories of Capitalism, Class, Gender, and Ethnicity 17 Index 239
2. Indians under Colonialism and Postcolonialism 33 3. Patriarchal Power in the Pueblos 53 4. The Private Property Revolution 69 5. Gendered Contradictions of Liberalism: Ethnicity, Property, and Households 97 6. Debt Peonage in Diriomo: Forced Labor Revisited 110 7. Patriarchy and Peonage 149 Conclusion 164 Epilogue: History Matters—The Sandinistas’ Myth of Modernity 172 Notes 181 Glossary 213 Bibliography 217 Acknowledgments xi Introduction: Who Controls the Past Controls the Future 1 1. Theories of Capitalism, Class, Gender, and Ethnicity 17 Index 239
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