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How well does it translate across cultural borders To Latin America?

FEMINIST THEORY. How well does it translate across cultural borders To Latin America?. What is Feminism?. Recognition that women are subordinated Identification of the sources of subordination Activism to end subordination Strategies to overcome subordination Feminism & Anthropology….

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How well does it translate across cultural borders To Latin America?

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  1. FEMINIST THEORY How well does it translate across cultural borders To Latin America?

  2. What is Feminism? • Recognition that women are subordinated • Identification of the sources of subordination • Activism to end subordination • Strategies to overcome subordination • Feminism & Anthropology…

  3. 1970s – Reject biological determinism, challenged male bias • Women’s subordination is universal • Domestic & Public Spheres • 1975 UN Conference on Women (Mexico City) • Was a catalyst for discussions about women

  4. 1980s – 2nd Wave Feminism • Critique Public/Private Dichotomy • A product of WASP feminists • Opposition: • Church – Inappropriate • Media – Feminists are radical, privileged • Marxists – Capitalism is gender neutral, *class • Systems of Oppression (gender, class, race, ethnicity) • Social Construction of Gender (not natural)

  5. 1990s – Challenge Canon, Post-Colonialism (Behar) • Expansion of feminist ethnology • Question objectivity • More reflexive approach • Multi-vocality • Effort to liberate anthropology from its links to colonialism

  6. Edna Acosta Belén&Christine Bose • Colonialism • Subordination rooted in power relations & ideologies of colonial expansion • Global capitalist expansion & patriarchal model of accumulation • Exploitation of Colonies & Women was fundamental to development of world capitalism & sexism

  7. Acosta Belén & Bose, cont. • Women as a Last Colony • Relationship between men & women resembles the relationship between countries of the global North & global South • Women & colonies are both low wage producers • Women & colonies share structural subordination & dependency • Women & colonies are overwhelmingly poor • Capitalist patriarchy colonized women by devaluing their household labor

  8. Ester Boserup • Criticized neglect of women’s economic roles • Men engaged in production in the public sphere, primary bread-winners • Women engaged in reproductive roles in the domestic sphere • Gendered Division of Labor • Women perform 2/3 of world’s work, earn 10% of all income • Helen Safá: Criticized “the male breadwinner”

  9. Women’s Studies in Latin America • The feminist critique of development theories (modernization, etc.) was a major factor in the emergence of women’s studies in Latin America

  10. Class & Gender • Liberal Feminists: Equality through difference • Jelin’s critique: • Feminists claim equality of rights & equal treatment • But they demand the right to differential treatment based on women’s uniqueness • Is this tension between equality & difference acceptable? Feasible?

  11. Marxist Feminists: • Liberal feminists are Western, bourgeois, middle class, white, reformist, unconcerned with class struggle • Subordination is rooted in capitalist system of production • Gender inequality is subsumed under class inequalities • Men’s wages tied to production • Women associated with reproduction, are assumed to be economically dependent • Receive money from men in exchange for managing family life

  12. Radical Feminists: No differences between men & women • Orthodox Marxism is economistic, reductionist, gender-blind • Class & Gender issues intersect • Subordination based on men’s control of women’s sexuality • Gender inequality is subsumed under the system of patriarchy

  13. So, Which Position is Correct? • Liberal feminism? • Marxist feminism? • Radical feminism? • Something else?

  14. Critique Against Essentializing • Elizabeth Dore: • Dualisms compress the multiple dimensions of women’s identities into a single model • Gender is multi-dimensional • Class, race, ethnicity, gender intersect • Gender – cultural, social, political, economic, historical dimensions • Power is gendered to institutionalize the exclusion of women in Latin America • Dialectical relationship between production & reproduction • End to Dichotomy

  15. Dore, cont… • And is cross-cut by: • Life cycle • Marital status • Family organization • The social construction of women’s identities is based on: • Class • Race • Ethnicity • Nation • Locality • Historical period

  16. Can We Apply Feminist Theory to Esperanza’s Story?

  17. Ruth Behar • Post-modernist Feminism • Abandonment of universalizing, authoritative accounts that presume objectivity • Concern with identity • Reflexive ethnographic accounts • Thinking about how those studied think about their lives • The anthologist's presence is made visible • Experimental, creative, indeterminate

  18. Deconstruction • Concern with texts & power in writing • Questions ethnographic authority—who speaks, who has power to speak, how is it interpreted • Issue of what makes ethnographic truths valid • Intersubjectivity of Anthropologist & “Other” • Knowledge is mutually constructed

  19. “Literary Wetback” • What does Behar suggest in referring to herself as a “Literary Wetback”? • Ruth: • Esperanza: • What is the Arthur Manby Problem? • Life Histories:

  20. Translating Feminist Theory Across Borders (?) • Behar gives Esperanza a voice in producing the text • Esperanza expresses the violence enacted upon her • But who has the power to write? • To carry her story across the border?

  21. Post-Modernism • Deconstruction challenges Anglo-American feminist stereotypes of “The Latin American Woman” • Behar’s concern: That Esperanza’s story will be read as a stereotypical view of Mexican men as brutal beasts & women as passive victims • Has she prevented this?

  22. Marianismo Again? • Esperanza as the image of suffering woman created by Western feminists… • “upon whose backs they have built analyses that establish their authority” • Subaltern Latin American women with truncated lives (uneducated, traditional, domestic, victimized) • Vs. Western women (educated, modern, control over their sexuality) • How does Esperanza conform or not to this image?

  23. Is Esperanza powerless, or does she appropriate power? • What might be the sources of her power? • Feminists: Esperanza does not fit the “exemplary feminist heroine for whom Western women are always searching” (neighborhood Zapata) • What is the significance of rage, suffering, & redemption for Esperanza?

  24. Analysis • Behar attributes “no-name feminism” to Esperanza • Does Esperanza engage in feminist thinking? • How many feminisms are there? • Issues of power between ethnographer & women studied (liberation or exploitation?) • This is not a book about events in the life of an oppressed woman, but confronts issues of power between the ethnographer and her interlocutor

  25. Borders • Encounter between Esperanza & Ruth – different locations on the boundaries of power • Class positions • Their talks in the kitchen reverberate into the maquiladoras, U.S. labor fields • “Translated Woman” • Ruth as coyote? • Colonization of story telling?

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