Cover -- Title page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- 1. LGBTQ Memories of the Sandinista Revolution -- 2. The Wizard of the Revolution and Other Stories -- 3. After the Revolution: 1990-2006 -- 4. The Return of Daniel Ortega -- 5. A Sexually Diverse Decade: 2007-2017 -- Conclusion: Nicaragua's Family Regime in Comparative Perspective -- Epilogue -- References -- Index -- About the Author.
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Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. New Roles for Sandino's Daughters -- 2. Feminine Challenges to Military Rule in El Salvador -- 3. Also a Women's Rebellion: The Rise of the Zapatista Army -- 4. Rethinking Women and Guerrilla Movements: Back to Cuba -- Appendix: Social Origins of the Central American Guerrillas -- Bibliography -- Index
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In many Latin American countries, guerrilla struggle and feminism have been linked in surprising ways. Women were mobilized by the thousands to promote revolutionary agendas that had little to do with increasing gender equality. They ended up creating a uniquely Latin American version of feminism that combined revolutionary goals of economic equality and social justice with typically feminist aims of equality, nonviolence, and reproductive rights. Drawing on more than two hundred interviews with women in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and the Mexican state of Chiapas, Karen Kampwirth tells the stor
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The LGBT or sexual diversity movement in Nicaragua, which was repressed by the FSLN in the 1980s, is currently supported by that party. I argue that this change in the FSLN's policy responds to shifting international frames regarding sexuality and human rights as well as to efforts to separate the LGBT movement from its allies in the feminist movement, and efforts to incorporate the LGBT movement into the FSLN's clientelistic networks. Despite real gains for LGBT activists as a result of these new policies, ultimately the FSLN has offered sexual diversity activists far more in the area of culture than rights.
In Nicaragua, the convergence of two regional trends—the resurgence of the electoral left and the emergence of significant antifeminist movements—has important implications for our understanding of left-wing parties and gender politics. An alliance between the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (Sandinista Front for National Liberation—FSLN) in the days before the 2006 election banned abortion even to save the woman's life. This can only be explained though the relationship of four long-term processes: (1) the FSLN's becoming a less ideological party, advocating reconciliation rather than revolution, (2) nearly a decade of pact making with the right, (3) the alienation of the feminist movement from the FSLN and divisions within it, and (4) the increasing sophistication of the antifeminist movement. The events of this period demonstrate the importance of examining gender politics in terms of the dynamic and sometimes unpredictable relationship between state, party, and civil society.