Kampwirth and Gonzalez have assembled a fine collection of articles about women and politics in Latin America, one that challenges existing approaches that have focused largely on studies of leftist or antiauthoritarian movements. The studies combine careful empirical research with a variety of disciplinary approaches to historicize the relationship between gender and political action in modern Latin America. An essential contribution to the increasingly sophisticated field of Latin American gender studies.
-Elizabeth Hutchison, University of New Mexico
In an important innovation, this volume presents new, interdisciplinary case studies of Latin American women's political activity on both the left and the right of the political spectrum. It offers comparisons that allow the reader to gain broader insight than has been available into the strategies and goals of women's political participation. Most significantly, the collection provides the basis for generating new theories of women's organizing that are not based solely on 'progressive' women's movements. Principal among its findings are that women's different political projects are crosscut by issues of feminist ideology, political autonomy, coalition-building, and maternalism. In particular, it concludes that no matter the goal, some level of autonomy from historically male-dominated institutions, whether political parties, unions, or the church, is necessary for women to assert their own interests, however they define them.
-Elisabeth Friedman, Barnard College
By looking at a range of female behavior, from 'reprehensible acts' to 'laudable ones,' Radical Women in Latin America offers an evenhanded perspective of women's political activities in the region. . . . By their interdisciplinary approach, Gonzalez and Kampwirth have added color to what could have been a rather dense account of gender politics and polemics. They also show us that political transitions cannot be fully explained without considering women's roles on both sides.
-Elizabeth Rigby, Times Literary Supplement
Gonzalez and Kampwirth are hard-working editors. The essays they selected are focused and smart; their introduction is comprehensive; there is a thematic coherence to the book. Their introduction provides a deft overview of twentieth-century Latin American political history and also articulates questions that frame the volume's ten essays. . . . [It is] the best recent overview of female radicalism in Latin America.
-Ann Farnsworth-Alvear, Women's Review of Books
Radical Women in Latin America is a welcome addition to the rapidly growing-and overlapping, literature-on women and social movements in Latin America that has appeared over the past decade.
Of particular interest to Latin Americanists-professional and graduate political scientists, historians, anthropologists, and sociologists-the book sheds new light on the carried activism of radical women in several South and Central American countries in recent decades.
It is commendable comparative scholarship, ranging extensively over both time and space while remaining firmly planted in the conflicts and controversies of the past forty years.
The editors bring together eight mostly young and richly talented scholars, primarily political scientists, to pen chapters. Gonzalez and Kampwirth add useful chronologies of the countries under study, an excellent introduction, a thoughtful conclusion, and a chapter each.
-Steve Breyman, Perspectives on Political Science
Gonzalez and Kampwirth's edited volume, Radical Women in Latin America: Left and Right, is groundbreaking.
-Cathy A. Rakowski, Latin American Research Review
Gonzalez and Kampwirth's edited volume, Radical Women in Latin America: Left and Right, is groundbreaking.
-Cathy Rakowski, Latin American Research Review
This collection contains a fascinating set of analysis of women's movements and feminists located on the broad left-right political spectrum.
-Virginia Vargas, International Feminist Journal of Politics
One of the most impressive features of this edited volume is the consistent high quality across the chapters. Each author has written a rich and insightful essay.
-Lorraine Bayard de Volo, Journal of Politics
The authors in this volume make excellent use of qualitative methods to provide valuable insights into radical women in Latin America.
-Lorraine Bayard de Volo, Journal of Politics
These essays help to create a history of Latin American women's recent past based on balanced research. They also help to establish comparisons among Latin American nations within a well-defined analytical framework.
-Asuncion Lavrin, American Historical Review
The collection of ten essays by young assistant professors from a variety of disciplines-anthropology, history, and political science-presents interdisciplinary case studies of Latin American women's political activity on both the left and the right of the political spectrum. . . . The editors and contributors to this multidisciplinary collection of essays have done not only extensive field research by interviews and personal conversations but also contributed material of archives and newspapers.
-Ingeborg Nickel, Iberoamericana