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Transatlantic Women's Networks Cultural Engagements from the 19th Century to the Present.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Anzini, Patrícia.
- 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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