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P22


Gender, machismo and marianismo in 21st century Latin America 
Convenor:
Jimmy Turner (University of Edinburgh)
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Chair:
Suzanne Clisby (University of Hull)
Location:
ATB G114
Start time:
12 April, 2013 at
Time zone: Europe/London
Session slots:
2

Short Abstract:

This panel seeks to draw together views from across disciplines on machismo and marianismo in 21st Century Latin America, particularly questioning whether there is any regional commonality and continuity. A variety of theoretical and substantive paper proposals is encouraged.

Long Abstract:

From the seemingly solid ground of Evelyn Stevens' (1973) theoretical framework of Machismo and Marianismo in Latin America through its subsequent debunking by Tracy Ehlers (1991) and the explosion of interest in masculinities across the region (there are many important contributors, but perhaps Matthew Guttman has been the most influential) the field of Gender Studies in Latin America has seen an increasing atomisation and fracturing. Driven also by Queer Theory this trend leaves us in a position where thinking of gender in a Latin American regional sense becomes difficult, and perhaps damaging. This increased recognition of diversity should be welcomed, but it does leave us needing to question whether in the 21st Century it is at all possible, and indeed desirable, to speak of machismo or marianismo in the sense of being gendered markers for a region. If they are, then how should they now be theorised to account for the diversity which we know to exist across Latin America, and if not then should we not now find new national, local, racial, ethnic, and classed terms and concepts which escape the totalising history of machismo/marianismo? This panel seeks to draw together views from across disciplines on machismo and marianismo in 21st Century Latin America, particularly questioning whether there is any regional commonality and continuity. A variety of theoretical and substantive paper proposals is encouraged.

Accepted papers:

Session 1