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Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs: Gender Identity Politics in Nicaragua, 1979-1999
 
 
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Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs: Gender Identity Politics in Nicaragua, 1979-1999 [Paperback]

Lorraine Bayard de Volo (Author)

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Book Description

September 13, 2001 0801867649 978-0801867644

How did a group of overwhelmingly poor, older women in a third-world country emerge to become a powerful force in their country's politics? Founded during the Nicaraguan revolution, the Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs of Matagalpa comprises women who supported the revolution but did not carry guns; who, in their words, gave up their loved ones to the struggle.

In this book Lorraine Bayard de Volo focuses on this group to reveal what she calls "the dominant but rarely examined maternal identity politics of revolution, war, and democratization." Dividing Nicaraguan politics (1979-99) into four periods, Bayard de Volo uses both macro- and micro-levels of analysis to capture the dialectical relationship between large-scale political processes and the "micropolitics" of collective action. She shows how Sandinistas and anti-Sandinistas mobilized both mothers and maternal imagery and in turn analyzes how this imagery was adopted and manipulated by the Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs. Employing a feminist Gramscian approach to address the gendered nature of cultural politics and collective identity, the author shows how, in the battle to capture Nicaraguan hearts and minds, both sides relied primarily on maternal images of women. Such "mobilizing identities" propelled women into unprecedented levels of collective action, yet at the same time channeled them away from feminist priorities.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

This is a wonderfully stimulating and rich book. It is well-organized and written in a clear and engaging style. Analysis and description are interwoven seamlessly and presented in a logical fashion. The language and ideas are accessible to a wide range of readers, including students. Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs makes an important contribution not only to the study of maternal politics but more generally to the existing literature on women, gender ideology, war, the state, nationalism, and social movements.

(Norma Stoltz Chincilla, California State University-Long Beach 2003)

[A]n extremely insightful and engaging book... an analysis of a rich case study that will be of interest to anyone working on social movements, identity politics, revolution, democratization, or war.

(Suzanne Dovi Perspectives on Political Science 2003)

Bayard de Volo's study is both an analysis of the symbolic and discursive deployment of motherhood, and a history of an organization's trajectory over almost two decades... In filling a gap in the literature on women and revolution, it will add to the ongoing debates over motherist movements and female collective action.

(Maxine Molyneux Hispanic American Historical Review )

Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs draws upon field research in Nicaragua during 1992-93 and extensive open-ended interviews with the most active members of the pro-Sandinista Committee of Mothers of heroes and Martyrs of Matagalpa... Bayard de Volo's research... fills an important void in the literature on women in politics.

(Waltraud Queiser Morales Perspectives on Politics )

This book is rich in detail and description, making it one of the best analyses of maternal gender politics in Nicaragua to date.

(Amy Lind American Journal of Sociology )

From the Publisher

"This is a wonderfully stimulating and rich book. It is well-organized and written in a clear and engaging style. Analysis and description are interwoven seamlessly and presented in a logical fashion. The language and ideas are accessible to a wide range of readers, including students. Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs makes an important contribution not only to the study of maternal politics but more generally to the existing literature on women, gender ideology, war, the state, nationalism, and social movements."—Norma Stoltz Chincilla, California State University-Long Beach

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
First Image: In memory of the Nicaraguan contra war, the Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs of Matagalpa perform a dance invoking the death of their children. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
patriotic wombs, madres sufridas, contra mothers, combative motherhood, madre sufrida, mobilizing identities, mobilized mothers, mobilizing identity, maternal community, fallen combatants, latent benefits, maternal symbolism, contra war, contra attacks, martyred children, fallen children, maternal identity, economic austerity programs, maternal imagery, servicio militar, maternal discourse, latent dimension, hegemonic struggle, maternal grief
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mothers of Matagalpa, Mothers of the Resistance, Latin America, Virgin Mary, Mother's Day, National Guard, Violeta Chamorro, Dofia Esperanza, Apoyo al Combatiente, National Assembly, State Department, Dofia Elsa, Dofia Maria, Daniel Ortega, Dofia Juana, Anastasio Somoza, United States, Cardinal Obando, Dofia Nacha, International Women's Day, Las Interesadas, Catholic Church, Central American, Father's Day, Frente Sandinista
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