UNITE DE RECHERCHE ARTS ET SCIENCES HUMAINES : PROJET DE RECHERCHE (2001-2006)
  • Département d'Etudes Hispaniques et Latino-américaines,
    Université de Nottingham

    Département d'Espagnol et
    de Portugais, Université de Manchester

[Five portraits of women]

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MONOGRAPHIE A PARAITRE PROCHAINEMENT

  • Catherine Davies, Claire Brewster et Hilary Owen, L’Indépendance de l’Amérique du Sud : sexes, politique, texte (Liverpool University Press)

Travail de recherche (à télécharger)

Publications

  • Hispanic Research Journal, Special edition, no.7. 1, Spring 2006.

Néstor Tomàs Auzea, « La condicion social de la mujer argentina. De la Revolucion de Mayo a la Organizacion Nacional 1810-1860 ». Auza apporte un survol de l'émergence des femmes dans la sphère publique dans la région du Rio de la Plata.

  • Matthew Brown, “Soldier heroes and the Colombian Wars of independence”. Brown analyse les aspirations et l'auto-représentation des soldats étrangers (mercenaires britanniques) combattant dans les Guerres d'Indépendance en Grande Colombie et retrace comment ils incarnèrent les valeurs républicaines durant le conflit.
  • Sarah C. Chambers, “Masculine virtues and feminine passions: Gender and race in the republicanism of Simon Bolivar”. Chambers se concentre sur les liens entre sexes, race et concepts de vertu et passion tels qu'ils apparaissent dans les écrits de Simon Bolivar.
  • Asuncion Lavrin, “Spanish American Women, 1790-1850: The challenge of Remembering”. Lavrin analyse la contribution de l'historiographie récente sur les femmes latino-américaines. Elle étudie deux journaux intimes écrits par des femmes dans les années 1840 (Maria Martinez de Nisser, Antioquia, Colombia et Agustina Palacio de Libarona, Argentina) qui éclairent l'image que se faisaient les femmes d'elles-mêmes et leurs attentes sociales, ainsi que les pensées intimes, préoccupations, motivations et aspirations des hommes et des femmes engagés dans les luttes politiques et le conflit militaire de la première moitié du dix-neuvième siècle.
  • Nicola Miller, “The Immoral Educator: Race, Gender and Citizenship in Simon Rodriguez's Programme for Popular Education”. Miller examine attentivement les idées de Rodriguez sur l'éducation dans le contexte de débats sur la politique en matière d’éducation, la race, les sexes et la citoyenneté dans l'Amérique espagnole de la fin du dix-huitième siècle au milieu du dix-neuvième.
  • Edition spéciale de la « Feminist Review », incluant des contributions des membres de l’équipe de ce projet.
  • Catherine Davies, Colonial Dependence and Sexual Difference: Reading for Gender in the Writings of Simón Bolívar (1783-1830), Feminist Review, 79, 2005, pp. 5-19.
  • Claire Brewster, Women and the Spanish-American Wars of Independence. An Overview, Feminist Review, 79, 2005, pp. 20-35.
  • Charlotte Liddell, Nature, Nurture and Nation. Nísia Floresta's Engagegment in the Breast-feeding Debate in Brazil and France, Feminist Review, 79, 2005, pp. 69-82.
  • Iona MacIntyre, Review of Beyond Imagined Communities. Reading and Writing the Nation in 19th C Latin America, and Dreams and Realities. Selected Fiction of Juana Manuela Gorriti, Feminist Review, 2005, pp. 180-181.
  • Catherine Davies, 'On Englishmen, Women, Indians and Slaves. Modernity in the Nineteenth-century Spanish American Novel, Bulletin of Spanish Studies, 82, no. 3-4, 2005, pp. 313-333.

Articles de conférences

  • Catherine Davies, 'Gendering Latin American Independence: the Textual Construction of Gender in the Political Writings of Simón Bolívar (1783-1830)', 'Narrating and Imaging the Nation Conference', School of Oriental and African Studies, London, 2003.
  • Catherine Davies, 'The Textual Construction of Gender in Bolívar's Political Writings (Part 2: Manifiesto de Cartagena, Delirio del Chimborazo, El Proyecto para instituir un Poder moral). Society for Latin American Studies conference, University of Manchester, 2003.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Disjunction in Modernity: Presenting the Pampas to the French', Interdisciplinary seminar series, School of Modern Languages, University of Birmingham, 2003.
  • Catherine Davies, 'On Slaves, Indians and Englishmen: Women Novelists in 19th C. Latin America', Seminar series Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Leeds; 'Beyond the Nation: New Directions in the Study of 19th C Latin America' conference, Institute of Latin American Studies, London, 2003.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Spanish-American Interiors: Spatial metaphors, gender and modernity', Romance Studies biennial conference, Gregynog, University of Wales, 2003.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Gender and Nation: The Poetry of Andrés Bello (1781-1865)', Society of Latin American Studies, Annual Conference, University of Leiden, 2004; Department of Spanish seminar series, University of Edinburgh, 2004.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Competing Masculinities and Political Discourse: The Work of Esteban Echeverría (1805-51)', Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese Seminar Series, University of Cambridge, 2005.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Post-Empire. Literature, Gender and New Nation States in Latin America 1800-1850', The Henry Thomas Lecture, University of Birmingham, 2005.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Gender and Violence, History and Fiction, Argentina c. 1840', Seminar series, Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Liverpool, 2005.
  • Catherine Davies, 'Gender and Politics: Women's Patriotic Poetry in Post-Independence Spanish America 1820-1840', AHGBI Annual Conference 'Antes y Después del Quijote', Valencia, 2005.
  • Catherine Davies, 'The Political Poetry of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, c. 1841: Beyond the Nation', Reading Spanish Caribbean Culture in the 21st Century, University of Birmingham, 2005.
  • Hilary Owen, 'Brazil's First Feminists and the Farroupilha War', Nottingham staff and post-graduate Seminar, March 2005.
  • Hilary Owen, 'Ana de Barandas e as primeiras feministas de Rio Grande do Sul', XI Seminario Nacional Mulher e Literatura Conference, Rio de Janeiro, August 2005.
  • Iona Macintyre, 'Dedicado al bello sexo argentino: a nineteenth-century editorial war', Society of Latin American Studies Annual Conference, Derby, April 2005
  • Iona Macintyre, 'Fraile Castañeda, las matronas, and the post-independence press in Buenos Aires', AHGBI, AHGBI Annual Conference 'Antes y Después del Quijote', Valencia, Spain, March 2005
  • Iona Macintyre, 'Newspapers, pamphlets and national organization in post-independence Buenos Aires', Postgraduates in Latin American Studies conference, University of Cambridge, February 2005
  • Iona Macintyre, 'Las Editoras: Fictitious women's writing in the Platine press', Unequal States: Race and Gender at Latin American Independence, University of Warwick, September 2004
  • Iona Macintyre, 'Deber de las damas argentinas con respecto a la sagrada causa y engrandecimiento de su patria: Feminine religious virtue and nation-building in La Aljaba', CEISAL, University of Bratislava, Slovakia, July 2004
  • Claire Brewster, 'Nation building in Independent Peru: San Martín's Orden del Sol of 1821', Society of Latin American Studies conference, Derby, April 2005
  • Claire Brewster, 'Women soldiers in the wars of Independence: "La amazona" Juana Azurduy' Society of Latin American Studies conference, Manchester, April 2003
  • Claire Brewster, 'Amazons or innocents?: women and Latin American independence', University of Manchester, May 2002
  • Charlotte Liddell, "Women's position and education in Brazil: change and constancy in Nísia Floresta's early publications." (SLAS (Society for Latin American Studies), Manchester, April 2003)
  • Charlotte Liddell, "From social rights to domestic duties: the changing emphasis of Nísia Floresta's Writings on the position of women in society." (WISPS (Women in Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American Studies), Liverpool, June 2003)
  • Charlotte Liddell, "Brazil's Uncle Tom: black complicity and white excuses in Nísia Floresta's 'antislavery' fiction." (PILAS (Postgraduates in Latin American Studies), Cambridge, February 2005)
  • Charlotte Liddell, "Nísia Floresta's indianist poem 'A Lágrima de um Caheté'.'' (AHGBI (Association of Hispanists of Great Britain and Ireland), Valencia, March/April 2005)