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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ix
- Preface: Indigenous Organizing and the Ezln in the Context of Neoliberalism in Mexico xi
- Acknowledgments xxi
-
Section One: Key Women’s Documents
- Women’s Revolutionary Law 1
- Women’s Rights in Our Traditions and Customs 5
- Comandanta Esther: Speech before the Mexican Congress 15
- International Day of the Rebel Woman 28
- Introduction 33
-
Section Two: Indigenous women’s organizing in Chiapas and Mexico: historical trajectories, border crossings
- Chapter 1. Between Feminist Ethnocentricity and Ethnic Essentialism: The Zapatistas’ Demands and the National Indigenous Women’s Movement 57
- Chapter 2. Indigenous Women and Zapatismo: New Horizons of Visibility 75
- Chapter 3. Gender and Stereotypes in the Social Movements of Chiapas 97
- Chapter 4. Weaving in the Spaces: Indigenous Women’s Organizing and the Politics of Scale in Mexico 115
-
Section Three: Rights and gender in ethnographic context
- Chapter 5. Indigenous Women’s Activism in Oaxaca and Chiapas 157
- Chapter 6. Autonomy and a Handful of Herbs: Contesting Gender and Ethnic Identities through Healing 176
- Chapter 7. Rights at the Intersection: Gender and Ethnicity in Neoliberal Mexico 203
- Chapter 8. “We Can No Longer Be Like Hens with Our Heads Bowed, We Must Raise Our Heads and Look Ahead”: A Consideration of the Daily Life of Zapatista Women 222
- References 239
- Index 263
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ix
- Preface: Indigenous Organizing and the Ezln in the Context of Neoliberalism in Mexico xi
- Acknowledgments xxi
-
Section One: Key Women’s Documents
- Women’s Revolutionary Law 1
- Women’s Rights in Our Traditions and Customs 5
- Comandanta Esther: Speech before the Mexican Congress 15
- International Day of the Rebel Woman 28
- Introduction 33
-
Section Two: Indigenous women’s organizing in Chiapas and Mexico: historical trajectories, border crossings
- Chapter 1. Between Feminist Ethnocentricity and Ethnic Essentialism: The Zapatistas’ Demands and the National Indigenous Women’s Movement 57
- Chapter 2. Indigenous Women and Zapatismo: New Horizons of Visibility 75
- Chapter 3. Gender and Stereotypes in the Social Movements of Chiapas 97
- Chapter 4. Weaving in the Spaces: Indigenous Women’s Organizing and the Politics of Scale in Mexico 115
-
Section Three: Rights and gender in ethnographic context
- Chapter 5. Indigenous Women’s Activism in Oaxaca and Chiapas 157
- Chapter 6. Autonomy and a Handful of Herbs: Contesting Gender and Ethnic Identities through Healing 176
- Chapter 7. Rights at the Intersection: Gender and Ethnicity in Neoliberal Mexico 203
- Chapter 8. “We Can No Longer Be Like Hens with Our Heads Bowed, We Must Raise Our Heads and Look Ahead”: A Consideration of the Daily Life of Zapatista Women 222
- References 239
- Index 263