Book contents
- Making the Revolution
- Making the Revolution
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editor’s Note
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Revolutionary Actors, Encounters, and Transformations
- 1 Common Ground
- 2 Identity, Class, and Nation
- 3 Indigenous Movements in the Eye of the Hurricane
- 4 Friends and Comrades
- 5 Total Subversion
- 6 “Sisters in Exploitation”
- 7 Revolutionaries without Revolution
- 8 Nationalism and Marxism in Rural Cold War Mexico
- 9 The Ethnic Question in Guatemala’s Armed Conflict
- 10 For Our Total Emancipation
- Index
10 - For Our Total Emancipation
The Making of Revolutionary Feminism in Insurgent El Salvador, 1977–1987
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 July 2019
- Making the Revolution
- Making the Revolution
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editor’s Note
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Revolutionary Actors, Encounters, and Transformations
- 1 Common Ground
- 2 Identity, Class, and Nation
- 3 Indigenous Movements in the Eye of the Hurricane
- 4 Friends and Comrades
- 5 Total Subversion
- 6 “Sisters in Exploitation”
- 7 Revolutionaries without Revolution
- 8 Nationalism and Marxism in Rural Cold War Mexico
- 9 The Ethnic Question in Guatemala’s Armed Conflict
- 10 For Our Total Emancipation
- Index
Summary
This study examines how Salvadoran women shaped revolutionary praxis, thus challenging prior academic accounts that have situated armed struggle and socialism in opposition to feminism. The Association of Salvadoran Women (AMES), an organization composed of combatants, peasants, and exiles, redefined revolution to mean the overthrow of both capitalism and patriarchy. The sites of feminist praxis included guerrilla territories in El Salvador, refugee camps in Costa Rica and Nicaragua, and solidarity networks in Mexico, Nicaragua, and the United States. Within the guerrilla territories, AMES members actively participated in community councils, an experiment in popular democracy, and generated a feminist praxis that linked the exigencies of wartime survival to the long-term liberation of women. At the international level, Salvadoran women collaborated with other radical women from Latin America and the United States in order to push their organizations in more feminist directions. This study is the first detailed analysis of AMES and offers a novel interpretation of the rise of Salvadoran feminism.
- Type
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- Information
- Making the RevolutionHistories of the Latin American Left, pp. 266 - 293Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019