Hybrid Nations examines the critical role that gender plays in the formation of national identities in Latin America that are negotiated and challenged within extreme gendered struggles for power. In the years following independence, many writers utilized oppositional concepts of gender in order to contest hegemonic governments and introduced in their works national male subjects that would replace the more caudillistatype rulers. During the nineteenth century and throughout the nation-building era in Latin America, conceptualizations of gender fluctuated in large part due to the scientific and philosophical trends that circulated in Europe, as well as the tumultuous atmosphere provided by independence. Due to the criss-crossing of gender codes that were manipulated in order
to realize the status of power, traditional perceptions based on the binary status of gender are simultaneously displaced or deconstructed, resulting in the formation of ambiguous or even androgynous male national subjects.
Hybrid Nations: Gender Troping and the Emergence of Bigendered Subjects in Latin American Narrative
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Book Details
Author(s)Patricia Lapolla Swier
PublisherFairleigh Dickinson
ISBN / ASIN1611474140
ISBN-139781611474145
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,863,409
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸