For too many years, women have been missing from or misrepresented in Latin American history. Like women elsewhere, they have not received proper credit for the role they played in their nations' development. Even with the increasingly scholarly attention now focused on women in Latin America, historical research lags far behind that on their counterparts in the United States or Western Europe. Many questions of approach, methodology, and sources, among others, remain to be answered and much labor must be expended before we can know the history of women in Latin America. But if we wish to have the necessary monographs and accumulated data before attempting to write syntheses, we must explore diverse aspects of women's lives, roles, and experiences, often concentrating on women in a single country or time frame.
CITATION STYLE
Hahner, J. E. (1980). Feminism, Women’s Rights, and the Suffrage Movement in Brazil, 1850–1932. Latin American Research Review, 15(1), 65–111. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0023879100032544
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