🌙

阐述《古巴人民》:1959年至1969年革命古巴中女性的政治化与生产力

Articulating the Pueblo Cubano : Women’s Politicization and Productivity in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959 to 1969

American Sociological Review · 2021
被引 3
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究1959年后古巴政权如何通过演讲和女性杂志等话语,在性别文化约束下构建全民革命认同,分析女性政治化与劳动力参与引发的文化反弹及性别分工制度化。

Abstract

How do political actors forge social solidarity across preexisting axes of social difference? This article investigates how political elites undertaking projects of political articulation—understood as linking together diverse constituencies to create integrated political blocs—contend with preexisting cultural constraints embedded in the social fabric. I do so by tracing how the post-1959 Cuban regime attempted to build a population-wide revolutionary identity despite persisting cultural understandings of women primarily as apolitical housewives. Through systematic analysis of a large corpus of state discourse in the form of speeches and women’s magazines, I show how regime leaders negotiated, with varying degrees of success over time, the cultural constraints that gender posed to their unifying project. Ultimately, the regime’s initiatives to politicize women through including them in mass campaigns and radicalizing their traditional household tasks were relatively successful, but cultural backlash against women’s increasing presence in the labor force prompted the institutionalization of a gendered division of labor in the economy that traditionalized their initially radical entry into the workplace. Analyzing how political elites confront and manage social differences within political blocs promises to contribute to a better understanding of the political production of social solidarity and its downstream effects on categorical inequalities.

政治学社会学性别研究政治经济学拉丁美洲研究