Bernadine Marie Hernandez is assistant professor of English at the University of New Mexico.
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Description
A wonderful addition for graduate courses and for scholars of the borderlands, labor history, gender and sexuality studies, and Chicanx/Latinx studies. Its influence will undoubtedly grow in the years to come."--Journal of Arizona History Bernadine Hernandez offers a rich, complex history of the Southwestern borderlands that is in deep conversation with Marxist and feminist theorists. . . . [A] timely contribution that points the way toward new approaches to centering marginalized groups in the histories of contested spaces."--Journal of African American History Absorbing. . . . While there are many strengths to Border Bodies, the most noteworthy is how teachable each chapter is for upper-division and graduate students."--Journal of the Civil War Era An important study . . . . Border Bodies effectively demonstrates the dehumanizing forces of sexual capital on large populations of women who are often erased from history . . . . Highly recommended."--CHOICE An impressive and meticulous archival work. . . .In five chapters, [Hernandez] immerses us in the heart of her poignant and necessary investigation through moments of sexual and gender violence in the U.S. borderlands between 1834 and 1916."--Journal of Borderlands Studies This important, nuanced volume shines a light on the importance of Mexicana, Nuevomexicana, Californiana, and Tejana women in the evolution of the U.S. (south)west."--Ms. Magazine

