Abstract
Feminist anthropology has built a field of knowledge within the discipline from a gender perspective. Currently, there are few works on the development of local feminist anthropologies. For that reason, in this work, I am interested in recovering the life and work of some important thinkers for feminist anthropology which I refer as rebels and revolutionaries. I focus on the development of this subfield in Chiapas and Central America, between the 1970s and 1990s (20th century), a period marked by political conflicts, repression, and counterinsurgency policies, which strongly affected students and teachers of the time, some of them organized in the Central American revolutionary movements. I focus specifically on the contributions of Alaíde Foppa, Stella Quan, Walda Barrios, and Marta Casaús and I analyze not only their anthropological and socio-scientific work about Marxist and socialist feminist critiques of traditional notions of class, the influences of Gramscian thought, the anti-colonial questions that marked their thinking, but also their political experiences in social and revolutionary movements, as well as some of their personal experiences.
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Trejo, M. R. (2021). Rebel and revolutionary women: Contributions to feminist anthropology (1970-1992). Vibrant Virtual Brazilian Anthropology, 18. https://doi.org/10.1590/1809-43412021v18a809
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