Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Sonia Hernández paints a vivid and heroic mural of Mexican labor activists in and around industrial Tampico during the early twentieth century in her latest book, For a Just and Better World: Engendering Anarchism in the Mexican Borderlands, 1900-1938. . . . A richly woven and important labor study." --Journal of American Ethnic History
"For a Just and Better World is a well-written and detail-rich narrative with a robust theoretical framework and creative analysis of a complex world. . . Sonia Hernández provides a much-needed map for readers to find both the women and the engendered anarchism integral in this story of a collective quest for a just and better world." --Southwestern Historical Quarterly

"Sonia Hernández's new book is an engaging story that unites a traditional focus on anarchist labor initiatives with a study of the roles that women anarchists played in the gendered and transnational politics stretching from the Gulf of Mexico and northward toward the Mexican-US border from before the Mexican Revolution to the end of the Lázaro Cárdenas era." --Hispanic American Historical Review



Table of Contents
CoverTItleCopyrightContentsList of IlustrationsAcknowledgmentsA Note on TerminologyAbbreviations Used in the TextTimelineIntroduction: Reenvisioning Mexican(a) Labor History across Borders1. The Circulation of Radical Ideologies, Early Transnational Collaboration, and Crafting a Women's Agenda2. Gendering Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalist Organizations: “Compañeras en la Lucha” and “Women of3. Feminismos Transfronterizos in Caritina Piña’s Labor Network4. The Language of Motherhood in Radical Labor Activism5. “Leave the Unions to the Men”: Anarchist Expressions and (En)Gendering Political Repression in the Midst of State-Sanctioned Socialism6. A Last Stand for Anarcho-Feminists in the Post-1920 Period7. Finding Closure: Legacies of Anarcho-Feminism in the Mexican BorderlandsNotesBibliographyIndexBack cover

For a Just and Better World Engendering

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A Hardback by Sonia Hernández

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    View other formats and editions of For a Just and Better World Engendering by Sonia Hernández

    Publisher: University of Illinois Press
    Publication Date: 30/11/2021
    ISBN13: 9780252044045, 978-0252044045
    ISBN10: 0252044045

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    "Sonia Hernández paints a vivid and heroic mural of Mexican labor activists in and around industrial Tampico during the early twentieth century in her latest book, For a Just and Better World: Engendering Anarchism in the Mexican Borderlands, 1900-1938. . . . A richly woven and important labor study." --Journal of American Ethnic History
    "For a Just and Better World is a well-written and detail-rich narrative with a robust theoretical framework and creative analysis of a complex world. . . Sonia Hernández provides a much-needed map for readers to find both the women and the engendered anarchism integral in this story of a collective quest for a just and better world." --Southwestern Historical Quarterly

    "Sonia Hernández's new book is an engaging story that unites a traditional focus on anarchist labor initiatives with a study of the roles that women anarchists played in the gendered and transnational politics stretching from the Gulf of Mexico and northward toward the Mexican-US border from before the Mexican Revolution to the end of the Lázaro Cárdenas era." --Hispanic American Historical Review



    Table of Contents
    CoverTItleCopyrightContentsList of IlustrationsAcknowledgmentsA Note on TerminologyAbbreviations Used in the TextTimelineIntroduction: Reenvisioning Mexican(a) Labor History across Borders1. The Circulation of Radical Ideologies, Early Transnational Collaboration, and Crafting a Women's Agenda2. Gendering Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalist Organizations: “Compañeras en la Lucha” and “Women of3. Feminismos Transfronterizos in Caritina Piña’s Labor Network4. The Language of Motherhood in Radical Labor Activism5. “Leave the Unions to the Men”: Anarchist Expressions and (En)Gendering Political Repression in the Midst of State-Sanctioned Socialism6. A Last Stand for Anarcho-Feminists in the Post-1920 Period7. Finding Closure: Legacies of Anarcho-Feminism in the Mexican BorderlandsNotesBibliographyIndexBack cover

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