Revolutionary Masculinity and Racial Inequality

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESSISBN: 9780826360090

Gendering War and Politics in Cuba

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By Bonnie A. Lucero
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
241 x 165 mm
Weight:
670 g
Pages:
344

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Description

Bonnie A. Lucero is a coeditor of Voices of Crime: Constructing and Contesting Social Control in Modern Latin America. She lives in New Orleans, Louisiana.

"Her timely analysis explores how gender and race relations forged definitions of manhood or 'revolutionary masculinity' based on honor and military service, replacing explicit racism with a gendered language of racialized civic engagement. Lucero employs neglected regional and municipal archives to build a narrative that follows a single corps of the Cuban army in Santa Clara province." --Choice "Deeply researched. . . . Revolutionary Masculinity and Racial Inequality is timely in its attentiveness to the emergence of masculinity as a discursive field, and it advances an interesting and original argument about the operation of gender roles in colonial and early republican Cuba."--Alison Fraunhar, Journal of Latin American Studies "For the vividness and clarity of its narrative and for its contributions to the historiography on gender in the early twentieth-century Caribbean, which has focused primarily on women and femininity, this is a path-opening monograph."--Adriana Chira, Hispanic American Historical Review "Lucero has crafted an intriguingly complex intersectional study of Cuba's anticolonial struggle, the implications of which stretch across the discipline and beyond. In tracking the gendered mechanisms of racial inequality in the struggle for Cuban independence, the book contributes considerably to our understanding of how gender and race intersect in war and politics, while also serving as a model for future historical studies."--Lorraine Bayard de Volo, American Historical Review

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