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Transatlantic Women's Networks Cultural Engagements from the 19th Century to the Present.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Anzini, Patrícia.
Contributor:
Lino, Verena Lindemann
EBSCOhost
Series:
Passagem Series.
Passagem Series ; v.19
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Cultural relations--History.
Cultural relations.
Women--Social networks--Atlantic Ocean Region.
Women.
Women--Atlantic Ocean Region--Intellectual life.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (356 p.).
Place of Publication:
Berlin : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2026.
Contents:
Cover
Title Page
Contents
Copyright Page
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Mapping Transatlantic Women's Networks
Bibliography
PART I Remapping Women's History
Sexist Memory and Amnesia: Exclusion Repertoires Toward Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Women Writers
Introduction
Amélia de Oliveira, interrupted poet
Maria Firmina dos Reis, a pioneer in the audacity of publishing
Auta de Souza, small jewel
Albertina Bertha, another chapter in discouraging criticism
Narcisa Amália, genius of evil
Teresa Margarida da Silva e Orta, the author of the first Brazilian novel
Final considerations on "sexist amnesia"
Fin-de-siècle Transatlantic Radicalismsand the "Woman Question": Eleanor Marx's Socialist Culture and the Project of a Proletarian Feminist Network
Introduction: Connecting a radical fin-de-siècle on both sides of the Atlantic
The New Woman and bourgeois/proletarian activism: Radical theories on the woman question
Eleanor Marx (1855-1898): The unique contribution of a Socialist Feminist to a Victorian counterculture
E. Marx and E. Aveling's The Woman Question (1886): Reassessing gender through social class
E. Marx and E. Aveling's The Working-Class Movement in America (1891) in the wake of their Agitation Tour (1886)
Conclusion: Recent relevance of Eleanor Marx's transatlantic proletarian feminist project
Navigating Double Burdens: Jewish Women Scholars, Exile, and the Role of Transatlantic Networks (1930s-1940s)
Jewish scholarly exile in a gendered perspective: Historiographical challenges and methodological considerations
The plight of Jewish women scholars in 1930s Europe: Facing gender and racial discriminations
Community and support: The role of solidarity networks for Jewish women scholars
Navigating exile: Professional resilience and the search for stability in an unfamiliar world
Conclusive remarks
Primary Sources
South Asian Women's Weapons of Resistance to the State Apparatus: From the Indian Subcontinent to Postcolonial Portugal
Introduction: Stating the research question
The imperial migrations of South Asians across the Indian Ocean (fifteenth-twentieth centuries): from the Indian subcontinent to colonial Mozambique
From the silent objectification of South Asians to the unspoken "weapons of the weak" in State administrative documents: a decolonial reading of the archive
Aishabibi Mussa Dadabhay's unspoken weapons of resistance
Objects that speak out and support the South Asian woman's "place of speech"
Conclusion
Girl Power, Graffiti, and Herstory: History by Other Means
Introduction
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Girl Power and the missing history of women graffiti writers
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Electronic reproduction. Ipswich, MA Available via World Wide Web.
Other Format:
Print version: Anzini, Patrícia Transatlantic Women's Networks
Print version:
ISBN:
3631945035
9783631945032
Publisher Number:
90104465347
CIPO000372931
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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