Uncategorized

Making Up the Difference (Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture)

Winner, Liz Carpenter Award For Research in the History of Women, Texas State Historical Association, Texas women broke barriers throughout the twentieth century, winning the right to vote, expanding their access to higher education, entering new professions, participating fully in civic and political life, and planning their families.

Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture Series by Marjorie Agosín

Yet these major achievements have hardly been recognized in histories of twentieth-century Texas. By contrast, cite Texas Through Women's Eyes cite offers a fascinating overview of women's experiences and achievements in the twentieth century, with an inclusive focus on rural women, working-class women, and women of color..

Women Writing Plays Three Decades of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize Louann Atkins Temple Women Cul

A Right to Health: The system was intended, among other goals, to provide universal access to health care services and to redefine health as a citizen's right and a duty of the state. A Right to Health explores how these goals have unfolded within an urban peripheral community located on the edges of the northeastern city of Fortaleza. Focusing on the decade and the impact of health care reforms on one low-income neighborhood, Jessica Jerome documents the tensions that arose between the ideals of the reforms and their entanglement with pe..

The Color of Love: Delving far deeper than previous sociologists have into the black Brazilian experience, Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman examines the relationship between racialization and the emotional life of a family.


  • Beschränkungen des Wirtschaftsverkehrs innerhalb der Europäischen Gemeinschaft (German Edition)?
  • ;
  • Bowie In Berlin: A New Career In A New Town.
  • Diamond Spirit (T1) (French Edition).
  • Friendshifts?

Based on interviews and a sixteen-month ethnography of ten working-class Brazilian families, this provocative work sheds light on how.. Without a map, navigate by the stars. Susan Tweit began learning this lesson as a young woman diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that was predicted to take her life in two to five years.

Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture Series by Marjorie Agosín

Offered no clear direction for getting well through conventional medicine, Tweit turned to the natural world that was both her solace and her field of study as a plant ecologist. Drawing intuitive connections between the natural processes and cycles she observed and the functions of her body, Tweit not only learned healthier ways of living but also discovered a great truth--love can heal. In this beautifully written, moving memoir, she describes how love of the natural world,.. Making and Exporting Arpilleras Under Pinochet.

Art can be a powerful avenue of resistance to oppressive governments. During the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile, some of the country's least powerful citizens--impoverished women living in Santiago's shantytowns--spotlighted the government's failings and use of violence by creating and selling arpilleras , appliqued pictures in cloth that portrayed the unemployment, poverty, and repression that they endured, their work to make ends meet, and their varied forms of protest.

Smuggled out of Chile by human rights organizations, the arpilleras raised international awareness of the Pinochet regime's abuses while providing income for the arpillera makers a.. Amazons, Wives, Nuns, and Witches: Women and the Catholic Church in Colonial Brazil, The Roman Catholic church played a dominant role in colonial Brazil, so that women's lives in the colony were shaped and constrained by the Church's ideals for pure women, as well as by parallel concepts in the Iberian honor code for women.

Records left by Jesuit missionaries, Roman Catholic church officials, and Portuguese Inquisitors make clear that women's daily lives and their opportunities for marriage, education, and religious practice were sharply circumscribed throughout the colonial period. Yet these same documents also provide evocative glimpses of the religious beliefs and practices that were especially cherished or independently developed by women fo.. I Ask for Justice: Maya Women, Dictators, and Crime in Guatemala, — Winner, Bryce Wood Book Award, Latin American Studies Association, Given Guatemala's record of human rights abuses, its legal system has often been portrayed as illegitimate and anemic.

As both a mirror and an instrument of the state, the judicial system simultaneously illuminates the limits of state rule and the state's ability to co-opt Guatemalans by hearing their voices in court. Against the backdrop of tw.. Most recent books about Chiapas, Mexico, focus on… More. Pass Well Over the Earth.

Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture Series

Texas Wisewomen Speak by P. Barbara Jordan spoke for many Texas women when sh… More. If your childhood friends were Agapito, the bomba… More. Shelve Looking for Carrascolendas: Making Up the Difference: This first in-depth study of a cosmetics direct s… More.

Shelve Making Up the Difference: Women, Beauty, and Direct Selling in Ecuador. Mayan Voices for Human Rights: In the last decades of the twentieth century, tho… More. Shelve Mayan Voices for Human Rights: Displaced Catholics in Highland Chiapas. Missing Mila, Finding Family: In the spring of , a North American couple wh… More. Shelve Missing Mila, Finding Family: Multiracial Subjects by SanSan Kwan.

Conferences and Events

The United States Census presents a twenty-f… More. Shelve Mixing It Up: No Gifts From Chance: The first new biography of America's foremost wom… More. Shelve No Gifts From Chance: A Biography Of Edith Wharton. I Ask for Justice challenges Winner, National Association for Ethnic Studies NAES Outstanding Book Award, As increasing global economic disparities, violence, and climate change provoke a rising tide of forced migration, many countries and local communities Once associated only with the wealthy and privileged in Latin America, lifelong illnesses are now emerging among a wider cross section of the population as an unfortunate consequence of growing urbanization and increased life Reed , Edited by Michael K.

She arrived for the first time in , on assignment for the New York Times Sunday Magazine to cover an archaeological survey of Mayan ruins.


  • Splash the Lifeboat; Three more short stories (kids stories / childrens story books Book 2).
  • Ruby Red (Jewel series Book 3).
  • Amazing Grades: Best Learning Strategies for Kinesthetic Learners (Amazing Grades: 101 Best Ways to Improve Your Grades Faster)?
  • Chinese-German M&A: A Guide for Chinese Business People.
  • ?
  • .

It was a contemporary Maya, however, During World War II, she was asked to build a women's army from scratch—and did Art can be a powerful avenue of resistance to oppressive governments.