Explores how the state's desire for a racially and culturally homogenous society has been deployed through images of womanhood that promote the notion of an idealized, acculturated female body
Marcia Stephenson is Associate Professor of Spanish at Purdue University.
"Gender and Modernity is a valuable contribution to our understanding of ethnic and gender relations in Bolivia. Stephenson achieves an original reading of the complex role of the state efforts to maintain their cultural identity and integrity in the face of a design to mask ethnicity. This is a rich book, full of intriguing and original ideas, and a must for students of modernization and social change." HAHR "This is an important feminist/cultural studies reading on the subject of racial formation in Andean Bolivia that has women at its center... It would be useful for courses such as Latin American women's history, feminist theory, cultural studies, the anthropology of women, gender studies, history of consciousness, and Andean studies." Guillermo Delgado-P., Director, Latin American and Latino Field Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
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