Gender and Populism in Latin America: Passionate Politics

Author:   Karen Kampwirth (Knox College)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271037097


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   11 August 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Gender and Populism in Latin America: Passionate Politics


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Author:   Karen Kampwirth (Knox College)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9780271037097


ISBN 10:   0271037091
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   11 August 2010
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Contents Foreword Kurt Weyland Acknowledgments Introduction Karen Kampwirth 1 The Politics of Opportunity: Mexican Populism Under Lázaro Cárdenas and Luis Echeverría Jocelyn Olcott 2 Changing Images of Male and Female in Ecuador: José María Velasco Ibarra and Abdalá Bucaram Ximena Sosa-Buchholz 3 Gender, Clientelistic Populism, and Memory: Somocista and Neo-Somocista Women’s Narratives in Liberal Nicaragua Victoria González-Rivera 4 From Working Mothers to Housewives: Gender and Brazilian Populism from Getúlio Vargas to Juscelino Kubitschek Joel Wolfe 5 Women and Populism in Brazil Michael Conniff 6 Populist Continuities in “Revolutionary” Peronism? A Comparative Analysis of the Gender Discourses of the First Peronism (1946–1955) and the Montoneros Karin Grammático 7 Populism from Above, Populism from Below: Gender Politics Under Alberto Fujimori and Evo Morales Stéphanie Rousseau 8 Populism and the Feminist Challenge in Nicaragua: The Return of Daniel Ortega Karen Kampwirth 9 Waking Women Up? Hugo Chávez, Populism, and Venezuela’s “Popular” Women Gioconda Espina and Cathy A. Rakowski 10 Gender, Popular Participation, and the State in Chávez’s Venezuela Sujatha Fernandes A Few Concluding Thoughts Karen Kampwirth Notes on Contributors Index

Reviews

Politics and society in Latin America cannot be understood without comprehending the power of populism. Combining fine-grained, historically rich analysis with powerful feminist scholarship, this superb volume explores the ways that populism and gender politics have been intertwined. Every essay is innovative, controversial, and highly persuasive. --Elizabeth Dore, University of Southampton


The case studies in this book offer a compelling and nuanced view of a multifaceted reality: populism is extremely difficult to grasp, both theoretically and empirically, and its complexity and ambiguity also apply to its gendered underpinnings. As the more general debate still unfolds as to whether Latin American populism is or has been a liberating or a controlling force toward the disfranchised masses, the same uncertainty prevails regarding its effects on women. Given the elusive nature of the topic itself, this book as a whole may raise more questions than it answers, but the editor and each of the individual contributors have done an outstanding job in giving the reader highly useful and intelligent insights into the role that gender plays in Latin American politics. --Victor Armony, Universit du Qu bec Montr al The vast literature on Latin American populism has long explored the relationships between populist leaders and diverse social groups defined largely by their class positions, but rarely has it analyzed the role of women in populist movements. Kampwirth's volume on gender and populism is a most welcome corrective to this oversight, and it sheds new light on the contradictory ways in which populist leaders--despite their macho tendencies--sometimes provide new legal rights, social benefits, or political opportunities for women. Readers of this volume will be introduced to a dimension of the populist experience that has for too long remained in the shadows. --Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University Politics and society in Latin America cannot be understood without comprehending the power of populism. Combining fine-grained, historically rich analysis with powerful feminist scholarship, this superb volume explores the ways that populism and gender politics have been intertwined. Every essay is innovative, controversial, and highly persuasive. --Elizabeth Dore, University of Southampton This book offers a range of rich case studies on an array of populist leaders and experiences. More significantly, it illustrates how populism is gendered and how it promotes different, even contradictory, gendered practices. Drawing on examples from the early twentieth century to the present, and from Mexico to Argentina, it not only fills a gap in our understanding of populism but also sheds new light on the gendered politics and impact of major figures and events in modern Latin American history. --Margaret Power, Illinois Institute of Technology Karen Kampwirth has put together a fascinating and timely book that uses the lens of populism to compare patterns of women's political mobilization and a gender perspective to explore the varieties of populism, both historical and contemporary. Insightful, provocative, and relevant. --Jane Jaquette, Occidental College


Karen Kampwirth has put together a fascinating and timely book that uses the lens of populism to compare patterns of women's political mobilization and a gender perspective to explore the varieties of populism, both historical and contemporary. Insightful, provocative, and relevant. -- Jane Jaquette


Author Information

Karen Kampwirth is Professor of Political Science and Chair of the Latin American Studies Program at Knox College. Her two previous books with Penn State Press are Women and Guerrilla Movements: Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chiapas, Cuba (2003) and, co-edited with Victoria González, Radical Women in Latin America: Left and Right (2001).

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