2024-03-28T15:22:20Z
https://teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp/oai
oai:teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp:00037752
2022-12-12T06:13:50Z
347:362:718
<産まない>女に夜明けは来ないのか? : 『真夜中の祈り』を通して見る作家の戦略
A dawn does not come to a woman without children? A Mexician woman writer's tactics in The Book of Lamentations.
洲崎, 圭子
SUSAKI, Keiko
open access
367
産む/産まない
近代国家
出産機械
母性
家族
application/pdf
紀要論文
Rosario Castellanos’ The Book of Lamentations (1962) is highly regarded as an “indigenista” novel. Indigenista novels depict the realities of indigenous peoples’lives and attempt to recover their voices and rights. Set in post-revolutionary Chiapas, Mexico in the late 1930s, the novel captures the power relations and conflicts between the Ladino landowners and indigenous insurgents spurred by agrarian land reform. However, the novel goes beyond the indigenista genre, centering on two characters’ separate struggles to find their place in society: an indigenous sterile woman who desires to have a child, and an educated common-law wife who refuses to have a baby. Focusing on the expected roles of women, and in particular the role of childbirth, in this study I would like to reassess The Book of Lamentations, viewing it not exclusively as an indigenista novel, but also as a work about and for women, both indigenous and Ladino, who seek to answer what it means to be a Mexican citizen, revealing their indignation against a society that has long marginalized Ladino women and doubly marginalized indigenous women.
ジェンダー研究 : お茶の水女子大学ジェンダー研究センター年報
2013-03-25
jpn
departmental bulletin paper
VoR
http://hdl.handle.net/10083/54789
https://teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp/records/37752
AA11391754
13450638
ジェンダー研究 : お茶の水女子大学ジェンダー研究センター年報
16
59
74
https://teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp/record/37752/files/p.59-74.pdf
application/pdf
1.1 MB
2018-04-19