994 resultados para Laura
Resumo:
Fil: Pascual Battista, Rosario. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación. Instituto de Investigaciones en Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales (UNLP-CONICET); Argentina.
Resumo:
Los hechos de la infancia nos marcan de maneras que no llegamos a discernir sino hasta que los nombramos y les damos una forma narrativa. Laura Alcoba en su novela La casa de los conejos (2008), narra su experiencia infantil en una casa operativa de Montoneros en la Argentina de los años 70. En la escritura, plasma los miedos, reproches y huecos de sentido sobre los que se erigió esa zona silenciada de su infancia. Su historia se inscribe dentro de un nuevo corpus de narraciones en torno a la memoria y recuperación del pasado de la última dictadura militar en Argentina: la de los hijos e hijas de militantes desparecidos, presos políticos y exiliados durante el terrorismo de estado; al mismo tiempo que deja entrever la singularidad de esa experiencia en su manera intransferiblemente única de decir "Todo comenzó" para echar a andar su escritura
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En texto consta 1649, como sentencia anterior al caso
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Plancha de acero
Resumo:
This dissertation identifies and challenges post-feminist narratives that remember the second wave or 1960s and 1970s liberal feminism as a radical form of activism. The narratives of three prominent post-feminist authors: Dr. Christina Hoff Sommers, Tammy Bruce and Dr. Laura Schlessinger are used as examples of how identification works as a rhetorical device that motivates individual actors to join in a struggle against liberal and radical feminist ideologies. I argue that each author draws on classically liberal and politically conservative virtues to define a "true" feminism that is at odds with alternative feminist commitments. I demonstrate how these authors create a subject position of a "true feminist" that is reminiscent of the classically liberal suffragist. In Burkean terms, each author constitutes the suffragist as a friend and juxtaposes her with the enemy--modern liberal and radical feminists. I articulate the consequences of such dialectical portrayals of feminist activism and further suggest that these authors' visions of feminism reinforce patriarchal practices, urging women to assimilate into a classically liberal society at the cost of social justice. In opposition to their memories of feminism, I offer a radical democratic approach of remembering feminism that is less concerned with the definition of feminism or feminist than it is with holistically addressing oppression and what oppression means to subjugated populations.