test
Search publications, data, projects and authors

Book

Spanish

ID: <

10670/1.kal1cv

>

Where these data come from
Bodies and diversities. Looking from the south

Abstract

The Colloquio Corps and Diversities took place on 19 and 20 June 2014 in the colonial city of San Cristóbal de Las Casas, supported by the Chiapas University of Sciences and Arts (UNICACH) and the Intercultural University of Chiapas (UNICH). Bodies and Diversities succeeded in bringing together a significant number of women and men from different generations, various professional training and various institutional structures dedicated to analysis, research, reflection and action on or from the corps. Those reports give an account of this. We must recognise, however, that reflections are basically focused on women’s bodies, while there are very few men’s bodies. How do we start thinking about the body in the state of Chiapas? Introduction, Inés Castro Apreza and Susie Morales Moreno, 9; 1. Thinking about the body. Gender and sexual difference. A new-old debate around bodies, Inés Castro Apreza, 19; Reflections on studies in the body, Tania Cruz Salazar, 34; 2. Abjected bodies, sexual diversity and sexual dissent. The new body: prostheses, drills and the new order of mutilations, Carlos Eduardo Pérez Jiménez, Oscar Cruz Pérez and Julieta Adriana Silva Zamora, 53; The biological watch and its markings on the female body. Body reflections and ‘advanced menopausia’ in women with bodies modified by a hysterectomy, Adriana Rosario Alcázar González, 62; Lesbian feminism in Chiapas. From the 1980s to the early years of the twenty-first century, Yolanda Castro Apreza, 72; Lesbian identities and social prejudices in Villafres and San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Claudia Rosas Ríos, 81; 3. Bodies, sexuality and health. Law and gender. The female body as a territory, Martha Figueroa Mier, 93; Patient bodies. Biomedicine and sanitary devices, Hilda Eugenia Argüello Avenharm, 104; Bodies and reproductive health. Stories of Central American migrant women in Soconusco, Dulce Karol Ramírez López, 113; 4. Bodies of women and men in full. Erotism, climaterio and mastectomy, body standardisation. Case studies of bodies living in the Alteña region, María Graciela Freyermuth Enciso, 127; Maturity, climaterial and menopause. Free port for medicalisation, Georgina Sánchez Ramírez, 140; The new amazones. Women after mastectomy, Montserrat Bosch Heras, 161; The bodies speak. Beyond the myths of menopause and erection between older women and men, Liliana Bellato Gil, 171; 5. Indigenous women: bodies and violence. Resistance and dominations I. Undesired pregnancy. Indigenous women and mestizas in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Georgina Rivas Bocanegra, 201; Bodies and distillates. Representations of Central American women in the local imaginary of the southern border, Susana Margarita Martínez Cruz e Inés Castro Apreza, 216; Ritual bodies. Experiences in religious diversity, Mónica Aguilar Mendizábal, 234; 6. Bodies and violence. Resistors and dominations II, Sexual workers. A new paradigm in protecting their rights, Cruz Yolanda Martínez Martínez, 247; Bodies in Central American sexual work in Tapachula, Rebeca Guadalupe Hernández Hernández, 259; A granite of sand in building a world free of violence, Nancy Zárate Castillo, 270; Social construction of love and domestic violence, Blanca Olivia Velázquez Torres, 285; 7. Young bodies and remeanings, imaginary corps. Depictions of body and sexuality among university students, Susie Morales Moreno, 293; From the body normalised to the transgressing body. Abortion experiences in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Fabiola Ixchel Muñoz Soto, 307; The teenage body. Between aesthetic and sexual, Óscar Cruz Pérez, Carlos Eduardo Pérez Jiménez and Germán Alejandro García Lara, 322; Dialogue on gender and body symbolisations with second semester students of the Language and Culture Licensing at UNICH, Virginia Ivonne Sánchez Vázquez, 334; 8. Corporate and remeanings. Music and art, racism and sexism. Transgressive bodies of indigenous women, Georgina Méndez Torres, 345; Bodily strategies in today’s maya textile art, Claudia Adelaida Gil Corridor, 354; Music, body and dance. Artistic and body expression, Martín de la Cruz Moya López, 363.

Your Feedback

Please give us your feedback and help us make GoTriple better.
Fill in our satisfaction questionnaire and tell us what you like about GoTriple!