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Women Of Maize

Women Of Maize

Guiomar Rovira

(2000)

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Book Details

Abstract

Many aspects of life have changed little since colonial times in the cloudy, misted highlands of the southernmost state of Mexico. In Chiapas women still marry at 13, and are often sold for a few bottles of liquor or a cow. On New Year's Day 1994 Chiapas was brought to the attention of the world by a very modern insurrection by the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN). Since the beginning women were integral to the rebellion and later the movement for social justice in Chiapas and Mexico. In this volume the women of Chiapas tell of their hopes and their struggles, and their fight for a more democratic and humane way of life in their state and their country. The account discusses the lives of indigenous women in the state. Personal and testimonial in style, the women interviewed recount their lives as women in their communities and also their part in the struggle to establish and defend the EZLN.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Title Page i
Copyright Page ii
Table of Contents iii
Map iv
The Zapatista Uprising: The Story so far... 1
Chapter 1: Settling the Forest 16
Chapter 2: Dawn in the Zapatista Forest 28
Chapter 3: Of love, Marriage, Children and War 44
Chapter 4: The Women Organise and Become Politically Aware 66
Chapter 5: The Zapatista Support Base 96
Chapter 6: Everyday Life in Los Altos de Chiapas 111
Chapter 7: Tzeltal Women in the Forest 137
Chapter 8: The Indigenous Clandestine Revolutionary Committee 148
Chapter 9: The Dialogue on Indigenous Women 164
Chapter 10: Our Hearts are Set Free 174
Glossary 180
Facts and Figures 182
Further Reading 183
Zapatista Timeline 184