Ideological Consolidation, Subject Formation, and the Discursive Creation of the “New Woman” in Revolutionary Cuba

Within elite-led projects of ideological transformation, how do leaders encourage practices that reflect and reinforce the ideas, attitudes, and beliefs they are trying to make hegemonic? This article investigates how political elites use different mechanisms of subject formation as they attempt to...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inQualitative sociology Vol. 47; no. 2; pp. 325 - 358
Main Author Triplett, Jen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.06.2024
Springer Nature B.V
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0162-0436
1573-7837
DOI10.1007/s11133-024-09560-2

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Within elite-led projects of ideological transformation, how do leaders encourage practices that reflect and reinforce the ideas, attitudes, and beliefs they are trying to make hegemonic? This article investigates how political elites use different mechanisms of subject formation as they attempt to replace one hegemonic ideology with another and to shape new subjects to match. Whereas leaders of the Mexican and Nicaraguan revolutions often approached creating “new women” through legislation and campaigns, the Cuban revolutionary elites leveraged their swift and broad control over mass media to complement institutional means of subject formation with discursive ones. I draw on careful qualitative analysis of 112 issues of the state-run women’s magazine Mujeres ( Women ) to show how leaders combined both linguistic and visual discourse to promote the development of the socialist “new woman” by encouraging women to participate in a wide range of labor outside of the home and by assisting them as they adjusted to the new material realities of the immediate post-revolutionary period. Bringing mass media swiftly and fully under state control allows leaders to communicate the ideological attitudes and behaviors they wish to promote among the people, while limiting alternate conceptions of revolutionary subjecthood.
AbstractList Within elite-led projects of ideological transformation, how do leaders encourage practices that reflect and reinforce the ideas, attitudes, and beliefs they are trying to make hegemonic? This article investigates how political elites use different mechanisms of subject formation as they attempt to replace one hegemonic ideology with another and to shape new subjects to match. Whereas leaders of the Mexican and Nicaraguan revolutions often approached creating “new women” through legislation and campaigns, the Cuban revolutionary elites leveraged their swift and broad control over mass media to complement institutional means of subject formation with discursive ones. I draw on careful qualitative analysis of 112 issues of the state-run women’s magazine Mujeres (Women) to show how leaders combined both linguistic and visual discourse to promote the development of the socialist “new woman” by encouraging women to participate in a wide range of labor outside of the home and by assisting them as they adjusted to the new material realities of the immediate post-revolutionary period. Bringing mass media swiftly and fully under state control allows leaders to communicate the ideological attitudes and behaviors they wish to promote among the people, while limiting alternate conceptions of revolutionary subjecthood.
Within elite-led projects of ideological transformation, how do leaders encourage practices that reflect and reinforce the ideas, attitudes, and beliefs they are trying to make hegemonic? This article investigates how political elites use different mechanisms of subject formation as they attempt to replace one hegemonic ideology with another and to shape new subjects to match. Whereas leaders of the Mexican and Nicaraguan revolutions often approached creating “new women” through legislation and campaigns, the Cuban revolutionary elites leveraged their swift and broad control over mass media to complement institutional means of subject formation with discursive ones. I draw on careful qualitative analysis of 112 issues of the state-run women’s magazine Mujeres ( Women ) to show how leaders combined both linguistic and visual discourse to promote the development of the socialist “new woman” by encouraging women to participate in a wide range of labor outside of the home and by assisting them as they adjusted to the new material realities of the immediate post-revolutionary period. Bringing mass media swiftly and fully under state control allows leaders to communicate the ideological attitudes and behaviors they wish to promote among the people, while limiting alternate conceptions of revolutionary subjecthood.
Author Triplett, Jen
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Jen
  orcidid: 0000-0002-9109-0923
  surname: Triplett
  fullname: Triplett, Jen
  email: jentrip@umich.edu
  organization: University of Michigan
BookMark eNp9kMtOwzAQRS0EEm3hB1hZYkvAj9RJlihQqFSBxEMsLccZl1SpXeykiF0_BH6uX0L6kNixGmnuuXdGt48OrbOA0Bkll5SQ5CpQSjmPCIsjkg0FidgB6tFhwqMk5ckh6hEqWERiLo5RP4QZIZ0tFj20HJfgajettKpx7mxwdVWqpnL2Aj-3xQx0g0fOz_crZUvcvAO-qYJufaiWgHMPWxE7s5XWq-8H-MRvbq7sevWDK4ufYOnqdgMp_4XztlAn6MioOsDpfg7Q6-j2Jb-PJo934_x6EmmWkCYSoqCpKLlhIosNUACtVMb0MBZpRjNmgFFS6KEu0gxMWhal0SoxhVZCQVKWfIDOd7kL7z5aCI2cudbb7qTkRMQx5RlhHcV2lPYuBA9GLnw1736VlMhNv3LXr-z6ldt-5cbEd6bQwXYK_i_6H9cvX_KDjg
Cites_doi 10.1080/14616700117971
10.1007/BF00598444
10.1017/lar.2022.85
10.1215/01636545-7857259
10.1080/13260219.2008.9649893
10.1017/S0022216X15000814
10.1007/s11133-020-09467-8
10.1057/9780230612006
10.1023/A:1024764214854
10.1017/CBO9780511815805
10.1177/00031224211060836
10.1111/j.1548-7466.2012.01156.x
10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00511.x
10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150133
10.1086/428688
10.1111/russ.12202
10.1017/S0026749X17000427
10.1525/var.1974.1.1.3
10.1002/berj.3696
10.2307/20040337
10.5149/9780807837368_guerra
10.1177/026101838400401004
10.1017/9781316823378
10.1111/1468-0424.00303
10.1353/jowh.0.0134
10.1057/9780333981825
10.1017/9781108105330
10.1007/s11186-017-9299-x
10.1080/17547075.2016.1142337
10.1353/jowh.2002.0011
10.1525/9780520936201
10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00508.x
10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00512.x
10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150106
10.1353/cub.2011.0024
10.1007/BF00264656
10.2752/175174412X13233545145264
10.1023/A:1024712230783
10.1017/tam.2021.5
10.1111/j.1470-9856.2007.00257.x
10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.361
10.1007/s11133-010-9184-7
10.1111/j.1468-0424.2011.01670.x
10.1007/978-1-349-23747-0_11
10.1007/BF02220134
10.2307/2095521
10.1215/00182168-74.3.393
10.1215/00182168-22.1.211
10.1177/030639688502700203
10.5149/northcarolina/9781469625003.001.0001
10.2307/2095325
10.1215/01636545-7857344
10.1007/BF00988995
10.1215/01636545-7857319
10.1525/9780520931046
10.1007/BF01106622
10.1215/00182168-84-1-83
10.56021/9780801867644
10.1353/lar.2003.0021
10.2307/j.ctt1d4v1bb
10.1093/jsh/shx118
10.1086/446998
10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400205
10.1017/S1743923X05050117
10.1177/0002764211419355
10.1111/j.1548-2456.2008.00017.x
10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638089.001.0001
10.1007/978-3-030-54510-9
10.1080/00905990903517835
10.1215/9780822387527-015
10.1007/s11186-022-09485-1
10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141111
10.2307/j.ctv11sn152
10.1086/727562
10.1017/CBO9780511570896
10.2307/jj.6167287.15
10.17813/maiq.5.1.g54k222086346251
10.1080/1472586X.2020.1770624
10.1017/CBO9781107295582
10.1177/0896920517731134
10.1093/sp/jxu004
10.1023/A:1024719029875
10.1353/cub.2018.0008
10.1080/23796529.2011.11674684
10.1353/cub.2004.0030
10.1111/0735-2751.00023
10.1177/107769908506200322
10.1177/030639687801900403
10.1177/089124390004003007
10.1007/BF00158262
10.1215/9780822389286
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024. Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.
Copyright_xml – notice: The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024. Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.
DBID AAYXX
CITATION
0-V
3V.
7U4
7UB
7XB
88J
8BJ
8FK
8G5
ABUWG
AFKRA
ALSLI
AZQEC
BENPR
BHHNA
CCPQU
DWI
DWQXO
FQK
GNUQQ
GUQSH
HEHIP
JBE
M2O
M2R
M2S
MBDVC
PHGZM
PHGZT
PKEHL
POGQB
PQEST
PQQKQ
PQUKI
PRQQA
Q9U
WZK
DOI 10.1007/s11133-024-09560-2
DatabaseName CrossRef
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection【Remote access available】
ProQuest Central (Corporate)
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)
Social Science Database (Alumni Edition)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)
ProQuest Research Library
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
Social Science Premium Collection
ProQuest Central Essentials
ProQuest Central
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest One
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest Central Korea
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Student
ProQuest Research Library
Sociology Collection
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
Research Library
Social Science Database
Sociology Database
Research Library (Corporate)
ProQuest Central Premium
ProQuest One Academic (New)
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest One Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Basic
Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
Research Library Prep
ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest Central Student
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest Central Essentials
ProQuest Social Science Journals (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Community College
Research Library (Alumni Edition)
Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest Central
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
ProQuest Central Korea
ProQuest Research Library
ProQuest Sociology Collection
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
ProQuest Central (New)
ProQuest Sociology
Social Science Premium Collection
ProQuest One Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Basic
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition
Sociology Collection
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
ProQuest Social Science Journals
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic (New)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
DatabaseTitleList Research Library Prep

Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: BENPR
  name: ProQuest Central
  url: https://www.proquest.com/central
  sourceTypes: Aggregation Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Sociology & Social History
EISSN 1573-7837
EndPage 358
ExternalDocumentID 10_1007_s11133_024_09560_2
GrantInformation_xml – fundername: University of Michigan's Rackham Student Research Grant
GroupedDBID -51
-5C
-5G
-BR
-EM
-Y2
-~C
-~X
.86
0-V
06D
0R~
0VY
123
199
1N0
1SB
2.D
203
28-
29P
2J2
2JN
2JY
2KG
2KM
2LR
2P1
2VQ
2~H
30V
3V.
4.4
406
408
409
40D
40E
53G
5QI
5VS
67Z
6NX
78A
8G5
8TC
8UJ
8V8
95-
95.
95~
96X
9M8
AAAVM
AABHQ
AACDK
AAGAY
AAHNG
AAIAL
AAJBT
AAJKR
AANTL
AANZL
AARHV
AARTL
AASML
AATNV
AATVU
AAUYE
AAWCG
AAYIU
AAYQN
AAYTO
AAYZH
ABAKF
ABBBX
ABBXA
ABDZT
ABECU
ABFTD
ABFTV
ABHLI
ABHQN
ABJNI
ABJOX
ABKCH
ABKTR
ABMNI
ABMQK
ABNWP
ABQBU
ABQSL
ABSXP
ABTEG
ABTHY
ABTKH
ABTMW
ABULA
ABUWG
ABWNU
ABXPI
ACAOD
ACBXY
ACDTI
ACGFS
ACHQT
ACHSB
ACHXU
ACKNC
ACMDZ
ACMLO
ACOKC
ACOMO
ACPIV
ACTDY
ACYUM
ACZOJ
ADHHG
ADHIR
ADIMF
ADINQ
ADKNI
ADKPE
ADRFC
ADTPH
ADURQ
ADYFF
ADZJE
ADZKW
AEBTG
AEFIE
AEFQL
AEGAL
AEGNC
AEJHL
AEJRE
AEKMD
AEMSY
AEOHA
AEPYU
AESKC
AETLH
AEVLU
AEXYK
AFBBN
AFEXP
AFFNX
AFGCZ
AFKRA
AFLOW
AFQWF
AFWTZ
AFZKB
AGAYW
AGDGC
AGGDS
AGJBK
AGMZJ
AGQEE
AGQMX
AGRTI
AGWIL
AGWZB
AGYKE
AHAVH
AHBYD
AHKAY
AHSBF
AHYZX
AIAKS
AIGIU
AIIXL
AILAN
AITGF
AJBLW
AJRNO
AJZVZ
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALSLI
ALWAN
AMKLP
AMXSW
AMYLF
AMYQR
AOCGG
ARALO
ARMRJ
ASOEW
ASPBG
AVWKF
AXYYD
AYQZM
AZFZN
AZQEC
B-.
BA0
BBWZM
BDATZ
BENPR
BGNMA
BPHCQ
BSONS
CAG
CCPQU
COF
CS3
CSCUP
DDRTE
DL5
DNIVK
DPUIP
DU5
DWQXO
EBLON
EBO
EBS
EIOEI
EJD
ESBYG
F5P
FEDTE
FERAY
FFXSO
FIGPU
FINBP
FNLPD
FRRFC
FSGXE
FWDCC
GGCAI
GGRSB
GJIRD
GNUQQ
GNWQR
GQ6
GQ7
GQ8
GUQSH
GXS
H13
HEHIP
HF~
HG5
HG6
HMJXF
HQYDN
HRMNR
HVGLF
HZ~
I09
IHE
IJ-
IKXTQ
ITM
IWAJR
IXC
IZIGR
IZQ
I~X
I~Z
J-C
J0Z
JBSCW
JCJTX
JZLTJ
K1G
KDC
KOV
KOW
LAK
LLZTM
LPU
M2O
M2R
M2S
M4Y
MA-
MQGED
MVM
N2Q
NB0
NDZJH
NPVJJ
NQJWS
NU0
O-J
O9-
O93
O9G
O9I
OAM
OHT
OVD
P19
P2P
P9Q
PF-
PQQKQ
PROAC
PT4
PT5
Q2X
QOK
QOS
R-Y
R4E
R89
R9I
RHV
RIG
RNI
ROL
RPX
RSV
RZC
RZD
RZK
S16
S1Z
S26
S27
S28
S3B
SAP
SCLPG
SDA
SDH
SDM
SHS
SHX
SISQX
SJYHP
SNE
SNPRN
SNX
SOHCF
SOJ
SPISZ
SRMVM
SSLCW
STPWE
SZN
T13
T16
TEORI
TH9
TN5
TSG
TSK
TSV
TUC
U2A
UG4
ULY
UOJIU
UQL
UTJUX
UZXMN
VC2
VFIZW
VQA
VXZ
W23
W48
WH7
WIP
WK6
WK8
XSW
YLTOR
YNT
Z45
ZCA
ZMTXR
ZWUKE
~8M
~A9
~EX
AAPKM
AAYXX
ABBRH
ABDBE
ABFSG
ABRTQ
ACSTC
ADHKG
ADXHL
AEZWR
AFDZB
AFHIU
AFOHR
AGQPQ
AHPBZ
AHWEU
AIXLP
ATHPR
AYFIA
CITATION
PHGZM
PHGZT
POGQB
PRQQA
PUEGO
7U4
7UB
7XB
8BJ
8FK
BHHNA
DWI
FQK
JBE
MBDVC
PKEHL
PQEST
PQUKI
Q9U
WZK
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c270t-66b186d3f2694fe1eecaa92c54689192fe210bc5cb89ef8dbdfca7fbca6ae7dd3
IEDL.DBID U2A
ISSN 0162-0436
IngestDate Fri Jul 25 09:38:35 EDT 2025
Mon Aug 25 03:12:06 EDT 2025
Fri Feb 21 02:42:10 EST 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 2
Keywords Women
Visual Analysis
Ideology
Socialism
Latin America
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c270t-66b186d3f2694fe1eecaa92c54689192fe210bc5cb89ef8dbdfca7fbca6ae7dd3
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
ORCID 0000-0002-9109-0923
PQID 3064413902
PQPubID 54067
PageCount 34
ParticipantIDs proquest_journals_3064413902
crossref_primary_10_1007_s11133_024_09560_2
springer_journals_10_1007_s11133_024_09560_2
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20240600
2024-06-00
20240601
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2024-06-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 6
  year: 2024
  text: 20240600
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationPlace New York
PublicationPlace_xml – name: New York
PublicationTitle Qualitative sociology
PublicationTitleAbbrev Qual Sociol
PublicationYear 2024
Publisher Springer US
Springer Nature B.V
Publisher_xml – name: Springer US
– name: Springer Nature B.V
References PurcellSusan KaufmanPescatelloAnnModernizing Women for a Modern Society: The Cuban CaseFemale and Male in Latin America1973PittsburgUniversity of Pittsburgh Press25727210.2307/jj.6167287.15
World Bank. 2022a. “Population Ages 15-64, Female - Cuba | Data.” Accessed January 25, 2023. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.1564.FE.IN?locations=CU.
CraskeNikkiAmbiguities and Ambivalences in Making the Nation: Women and Politics in 20th-Century MexicoFeminist Review20057911163310.1057/palgrave.fr.9400205
SkocpolThedaStates and Social Revolutions a Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China1979Cambridge and New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9780511815805
NelsonLowryCuba: The Measure of a Revolution1972MinneapolisUniversity of Minnesota Press
PollettaFrancescaChenPang Ching BobbyGardnerBeth GharrityMotesAliceThe Sociology of StorytellingAnnual Review of Sociology201137110913010.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150106
ChomskyAvivaRewriting Gender in the New Revolutionary Song: Cuba’s Nueva Trova and BeyondRadical History Review2020202013614215510.1215/01636545-7857319
HoDenise YCurating Revolution: Politics on Display in Mao’s China2018CambridgeCambridge University Press
Gastón-Greenberg, Javier. 2021. “Hero Genesis and Crisis: Comic Books and Identity Formation in Revolutionary Cuba.” PhD dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook, New York
RodriguezLuluDimitrovaDaniela VThe Levels of Visual FramingJournal of Visual Literacy2011301486510.1080/23796529.2011.11674684
SchwartzDonaVisual Ethnography: Using Photography in Qualitative ResearchQualitative Sociology198912211915410.1007/BF00988995
Thomas-WoodardTiffany A‘Toward the Gates of Eternity’: Celia Sanchez Manduley and the Creation of Cuba’s New WomanCuban Studies200334115418010.1353/cub.2004.0030
CasalLourdesBerkinCRLovettCMRevolution and Conciencia: Women in CubaWomen, War, and Revolution1980New YorkHolmes & Meier183204
BonnellVictoria EIconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters under Lenin and Stalin1997BerkeleyUniversity of California Press
GuevaraCheEl Socialismo y El Hombre En Cuba1965La HabanaEdiciones R
Fields, Barbara Jeanne. 1990. “Slavery, Race and Ideology in the United States of America.” New Left Review (I/181): 95–118.
HynsonRachelLaboring for the State: Women, Family, and Work in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959–19712020CambridgeCambridge University Press10.1017/9781108105330
ChinchillaNorma StoltzRevolutionary Popular Feminism in Nicaragua: Articulating Class, Gender, and National SovereigntyGender and Society19904337039710.1177/089124390004003007
HermanRebeccaAn Army of Educators: Gender, Revolution and the Cuban Literacy Campaign of 1961Gender & History: Oxford20122419311110.1111/j.1468-0424.2011.01670.x
PeriAlexisNew Soviet Woman: The Post-World War II Feminine Ideal at Home and AbroadThe Russian Review201877462164410.1111/russ.12202
FreirePauloPedagogy of the Oppressed201430th anniversaryNew York and LondonBloomsbury
ForanJohnStudying Revolutions through the Prism of Race, Gender, and Class: Notes toward a FrameworkRace, Gender & Class200182117141
DanielPatriciaOxfam Canada in Cuba: Gender Injustice, a Key Obstacle to DevelopmentCuban Studies2012421525610.1353/cub.2011.0024
CastroFidel“Discurso Pronunciado En El Acto de Fusión de Todas Las Organizaciones Femeninas Revolucionarias1960Havana, CubaSalón-Teatro de la CTC
MontoyaRosarioHouse, Street, Collective: Revolutionary Geographies and Gender Transformation in Nicaragua, 1979–99Latin American Research Review2003382619310.1353/lar.2003.0021
JosephValerieHow Thomas Nelson and Sons’ Royal Readers Textbooks Helped Instill the Standards of Whiteness into Colonized Black Caribbean Subjects and Their DescendentsTransforming Anthropology201220214615810.1111/j.1548-7466.2012.01156.x
GellnerErnestNations and Nationalism1983OxfordBlackwell
JonesAdamThe Death of Barricada: Politics and Professionalism in the Post-Sandinista PressJournalism Studies2001222435910.1080/14616700117971
SwidlerAnnCulture in Action: Symbols and StrategiesAmerican Sociological Review198651227328610.2307/2095521
FreirePauloLiteracy and the Possible DreamProspects19766687110.1007/BF02220134
SandersNicholeGender and Welfare Reform in Post- Revolutionary MexicoGender & History200820117017510.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00512.x
Fleites-LearMariselaMirrors in the KitchenFood, Culture & Society201215224126010.2752/175174412X13233545145264
AndersonBenedictImagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism1983LondonVerso
FábregasMoyaJohannaIThe Cuban Woman’s Revolutionary Experience: Patriarchal Culture and the State’s Gender Ideology, 1950–1976Journal of Women’s History2010221618410.1353/jowh.0.0134
JacobsRonald NSmithPhilipRomance, Irony, and SolidaritySociological Theory1997151608010.1111/0735-2751.00023
SewellWilliam HamiltonA Rhetoric of Bourgeois Revolution: The Abbé Sieyes and What Is the Third Estate?1994DurhamDuke University Press10.2307/j.ctv11sn152
FernandesSujathaTransnationalism and Feminist Activism in Cuba: The Case of MagínPolitics & Gender20051343145210.1017/S1743923X05050117
PetersChristabelleBustamanteMJLambeJLWhen the ‘New Man’ Met the ‘Old Man’: Guevara, Nyerere, and the Roots of Latin-AfricanismThe Revolution from Within: Cuba, 1959–19802019DurhamDuke University Press170188
GierynThomas FBoundary-Work and the Demarcation of Science from Non-Science: Strains and Interests in Professional Ideologies of ScientistsAmerican Sociological Review198348678179510.2307/2095325
MannMichaelThe Sources of Social Power1986Cambridge and New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9780511570896
SnyderEmilyInternationalizing the Revolutionary Family: Love and Politics in Cuba and Nicaragua, 1979–1990Radical History Review2020136507410.1215/01636545-7857259
SkarpelisAKMHorror Vacui: Racial Misalignment, Symbolic Repair, and Imperial Legitimation in German National Socialist Portrait PhotographyAmerican Journal of Sociology2023129231338310.1086/727562
VaughanMary KayLewisStephen EVaughanMKLewisSEIntroductionThe Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–19402006DurhamDuke University Press
EvansHarrietDonaldStephanieEvansHDonaldSIntroducing Posters of China’s Cultural RevolutionPicturing Power in the People’s Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution1999New YorkRowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc.126
ReedSara DesvernineWomen, Work, and Revolution: A Do-It-Yourself PracticeDesign and Culture201681275410.1080/17547075.2016.1142337
MoghadamValentine MForanJGender and RevolutionsTheorizing Revolutions: New Approaches from Across the Disciplines1997London and New YorkRoutledge133162
ChuangTiffany JFrom Modern Urban Resident to Sociable Urban Citizen: The Making of Spatial-Political Subjectivity through Public Housing in Singapore, 1972–2021Theory and Society202251583587010.1007/s11186-022-09485-1
SmithBenjamin TThe Mexican Press and Civil Society, 1940–1976: Stories from the Newsroom, Stories from the Street2018Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina Press10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638089.001.0001
FlorianZollmannBringing Propaganda Back into News Media StudiesCritical Sociology201945332934510.1177/0896920517731134
CollierJohnJr.Visual Anthropology: Photography as a Research Method1967New YorkHolt, Rinehart and Winston
LawsonChappell HBuilding the Fourth Estate: Democratization and the Rise of a Free Press in Mexico2002BerkeleyUniversity of California Press10.1525/9780520936201
OlcottJocelyn‘Worthy Wives and Mothers’: State-Sponsored Women’s Organizing in Postrevolutionary MexicoJournal of Women’s History200213410613110.1353/jowh.2002.0011
BerezinMabelPolitics and Culture: A Less Fissured TerrainAnnual Review of Sociology19972313618310.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.361
ZubrzyckiGenevièveHistory and the National Sensorium: Making Sense of Polish MythologyQualitative Sociology2011341215710.1007/s11133-010-9184-7
LovemanMaraThe Modern State and the Primitive Accumulation of Symbolic PowerThe American Journal of Sociology200511061651168310.1086/428688
La BelleThomas JFormal, Nonformal and Informal Education: A Holistic Perspective on Lifelong LearningInternational Review of Education198228215917510.1007/BF00598444
Pérez-StableMarifeliCuban Women and the Struggle for ‘Conciencia’Cuban Studies1987175172
HeumannSilkeGender, Sexuality, and Politics: Rethinking the Relationship Between Feminism and Sandinismo in NicaraguaSocial Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society201421229031410.1093/sp/jxu004
LentJohn ACuban Mass Media after 25 Years of RevolutionJournalism Quarterly198562360961510.1177/107769908506200322
OzoufMonaFestivals and the French Revolution1988CambridgeHarvard University Press
CastroFidelDiscurso Pronunciado En La Clausura de La Plenaria Nacional de La Asociacion Nacional de Agricultores Pequeños (ANAP)1962Havana, Cuba“Chaplin” Theater
CabreraArúsMaríaADirty Money? The Politics of Representation in Cuban Revolutionary BanknotesVisual Studies2020352–312413510.1080/1472586X.2020.1770624
HobsbawmEJNations and Nationalism Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality2012New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9781107295582
Wickham-CrowleyTimothy PThe Rise (And Sometimes Fall) of Guerrilla Governments in Latin AmericaSociological Forum19872347349910.1007/BF01106622
ChaseMichelleRevolution within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952–19622015Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina Press10.5149/northcarolina/9781469625003.001.0001
Bayard de VoloLorraineWomen and the Cuban Insurrection: How Gender Shaped Castro’s Victory2018CambridgeCambridge University Press10.1017/9781316823378
TorresCarlos AlbertoThe State, Nonformal Education, and Socialism in Cuba, Nicaragua, and GrenadaComparative Education Review199135111013010.1086/446998
CushingIanLanguage, Discipline and ‘Teaching Like a Champion’British Educational Research Journal2021471234110.1002/berj.3696
HarperDouglasVisualizing Structure: Reading Surfaces of Social LifeQualitative Sociology199720577710.1023/A:1024764214854
HannaLaniTricontinental’s Internationa
EJ Hobsbawm (9560_CR72) 2012
Paulo Freire (9560_CR53) 1976; 6
Norma Stoltz Chinchilla (9560_CR30) 1990; 4
Lowry Nelson (9560_CR97) 1972
Lillian Guerra (9560_CR63) 2012
John Foran (9560_CR51) 2001; 8
Carlos Alberto Torres (9560_CR128) 1991; 35
Michael Power (9560_CR105) 2011; 37
Mary Kay Vaughan (9560_CR132) 2006
Timothy P Wickham-Crowley (9560_CR133) 1987; 2
Sujatha Fernandes (9560_CR44) 2005; 1
John L Campbell (9560_CR22) 2002; 28
Fidel Castro (9560_CR25) 1962
Harriet Evans (9560_CR40) 1999
Aviva Chomsky (9560_CR31) 2020; 2020
Carollee Bengelsdorf (9560_CR10) 1985; 27
Moya Fábregas (9560_CR42) 2010; 22
Che Guevara (9560_CR64) 1965
Johnnetta B Cole (9560_CR33) 1986; 15
Sara Desvernine Reed (9560_CR109) 2016; 8
Greg Grandin (9560_CR62) 2004; 84
Geneviève Zubrzycki (9560_CR137) 2011; 34
Victoria E Bonnell (9560_CR15) 1997
Alan Knight (9560_CR78) 1994; 74
Mabel Berezin (9560_CR13) 1997; 23
Patricia Daniel (9560_CR38) 2012; 42
Helge Blakkisrud (9560_CR14) 2010; 38
Thomas J La Belle (9560_CR82) 1982; 28
Jocelyn Olcott (9560_CR98) 2002; 13
Ann Swidler (9560_CR126) 1986; 51
Kimberley Ens Manning (9560_CR90) 2005; 5
9560_CR91
9560_CR92
Marifeli Pérez-Stable (9560_CR101) 1987; 17
Lynne Attwood (9560_CR3) 1999
Shahira Fahmy (9560_CR43) 2012; 56
Nichole Sanders (9560_CR111) 2008; 20
Benjamin T Smith (9560_CR119) 2018
Tiffany J Chuang (9560_CR32) 2022; 51
Alexis Peri (9560_CR102) 2018; 77
Benedict Anderson (9560_CR2) 1983
Max Azicri (9560_CR5) 1988
Shannon Bell (9560_CR9) 1990; 15
Rafael A Lecuona (9560_CR85) 1987; 4
William Hamilton Sewell (9560_CR116) 1994
Susan Franceschet (9560_CR52) 2016; 48
Rebecca Herman (9560_CR68) 2012; 24
Lani Hanna (9560_CR65) 2020; 2020
Rosario Montoya (9560_CR96) 2003; 38
John D French (9560_CR55) 2008; 50
Maxine Molyneux (9560_CR95) 1984; 4
Emily Snyder (9560_CR121) 2020; 136
9560_CR46
Mara Loveman (9560_CR88) 2005; 110
Michelle Chase (9560_CR28) 2015
Joan W Scott (9560_CR113) 2008; 20
Silke Heumann (9560_CR70) 2014; 21
Philip H Coombs (9560_CR35) 1974
Zollmann Florian (9560_CR50) 2019; 45
Michael Mann (9560_CR89) 1986
Pamela E Oliver (9560_CR99) 2000; 4
Anna Kyriazi (9560_CR81) 2020; 43
Marisela Fleites-Lear (9560_CR48) 2008; 14
Lorraine Bayard de Volo (9560_CR7) 2018
Ian Cushing (9560_CR37) 2021; 47
Tina Mai Chen (9560_CR29) 2003; 15
Ronald N Jacobs (9560_CR75) 1997; 15
Juanita Darling (9560_CR39) 2008
Devyn Spence Benson (9560_CR12) 2018; 46
Thomas F Gieryn (9560_CR58) 1983; 48
Kris Kodrich (9560_CR80) 2008; 27
Ernest Gellner (9560_CR57) 1983
Ali Usman Qasmi (9560_CR107) 2019; 53
Fidel Castro (9560_CR26) 1962
Francesca Polletta (9560_CR104) 2011; 37
Paulo Freire (9560_CR54) 2014
Ana Serra (9560_CR115) 2007
Sarah A Buck (9560_CR16) 2006
Max Azicri (9560_CR4) 1979; 2
Susan Kaufman Purcell (9560_CR106) 1973
Lorraine Bayard de Volo (9560_CR6) 2001
Eric Selbin (9560_CR114) 1993
John Collier Jr. (9560_CR34) 1967
9560_CR124
9560_CR60
9560_CR61
Dennis Zuev (9560_CR138) 2020
Rachel Hynson (9560_CR74) 2020
Joy Elizabeth Hayes (9560_CR67) 2006
Debra Evenson (9560_CR41) 1986; 4
Charles S Suchar (9560_CR125) 1997; 20
Theda Skocpol (9560_CR118) 1979
Emily Snyder (9560_CR122) 2021; 78
Arús Cabrera (9560_CR21) 2020; 35
Chappell H Lawson (9560_CR84) 2002
9560_CR56
John A Lent (9560_CR86) 1985; 62
Dona Schwartz (9560_CR112) 1989; 12
J. Justin Castro (9560_CR27) 2016
Mansoor Moaddel (9560_CR93) 1995
Marisela Fleites-Lear (9560_CR49) 2012; 15
Denise Y Ho (9560_CR71) 2018
Fidel Castro (9560_CR24) 1960
Douglas Harper (9560_CR66) 1997; 20
Kris Kodrich (9560_CR79) 2002
Maurice Agulhon (9560_CR1) 1981
Christabelle Peters (9560_CR103) 2019
Valentine M Moghadam (9560_CR94) 1997
Valerie Joseph (9560_CR77) 2012; 20
Mona Ozouf (9560_CR100) 1988
Lois MAlfred SmithPadula (9560_CR120) 1996
Mary Kay Vaughan (9560_CR131) 2000
Arús Cabrera (9560_CR20) 2019
Nikki Craske (9560_CR36) 2005; 79
Lourdes Casal (9560_CR23) 1980
Arús Cabrera (9560_CR19) 2017; 46
Jen Triplett (9560_CR129) 2022; 87
Lulu Rodriguez (9560_CR110) 2011; 30
Joanne Hershfield (9560_CR69) 2008
AKM Skarpelis (9560_CR117) 2023; 129
Janet Woollacott (9560_CR134) 1982
Aceves Fernández (9560_CR45) 2006
William M LeoGrande (9560_CR87) 1979; 58
Gene Burns (9560_CR18) 1996; 25
Steven J Gold (9560_CR59) 1997; 20
Sarah A Buck (9560_CR17) 2008; 20
Emily C Snyder (9560_CR123) 2023; 58
Lynn Hunt (9560_CR73) 2016
Thomas Rath (9560_CR108) 2019; 52
Carollee Bengelsdorf (9560_CR11) 1978; 19
Howard S Becker (9560_CR8) 1974; 1
Adam Jones (9560_CR76) 2001; 2
ErnestoChantal Laclau (9560_CR83) 1985
Tiffany A Thomas-Woodard (9560_CR127) 2003; 34
9560_CR135
Angharad N Valdivia (9560_CR130) 1990; 1
Lillian Estelle Fisher (9560_CR47) 1942; 22
9560_CR136
References_xml – reference: CoombsPhilip HAhmedManzoorAttacking Rural Poverty: How Nonformal Education Can Help1974BaltimoreJohns Hopkins University Press
– reference: PeriAlexisNew Soviet Woman: The Post-World War II Feminine Ideal at Home and AbroadThe Russian Review201877462164410.1111/russ.12202
– reference: SnyderEmilyInternationalizing the Revolutionary Family: Love and Politics in Cuba and Nicaragua, 1979–1990Radical History Review2020136507410.1215/01636545-7857259
– reference: TorresCarlos AlbertoThe State, Nonformal Education, and Socialism in Cuba, Nicaragua, and GrenadaComparative Education Review199135111013010.1086/446998
– reference: ReedSara DesvernineWomen, Work, and Revolution: A Do-It-Yourself PracticeDesign and Culture201681275410.1080/17547075.2016.1142337
– reference: WoollacottJanetGurevitchMBennettTCurrenJWoollacottJMessages and MeaningsCulture, Society, and the Media1982New YorkMethuen
– reference: GierynThomas FBoundary-Work and the Demarcation of Science from Non-Science: Strains and Interests in Professional Ideologies of ScientistsAmerican Sociological Review198348678179510.2307/2095325
– reference: PollettaFrancescaChenPang Ching BobbyGardnerBeth GharrityMotesAliceThe Sociology of StorytellingAnnual Review of Sociology201137110913010.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150106
– reference: GuerraLillianVisions of Power in Cuba: Revolution, Redemption, and Resistance, 1959–19712012Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina Press10.5149/9780807837368_guerra
– reference: BeckerHoward SPhotography and SociologyStudies in the Anthropology of Visual Communication19741132610.1525/var.1974.1.1.3
– reference: EvensonDebraWomen’s Equality in Cuba: What Difference Does a Revolution MakeLaw and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice198642295326
– reference: González de Armas, Liuba. 2020. Revolutionary Poster Women: Socialist Realism, Pop Art, and State Rhetoric on Femininity in Cuban Political Graphics, 1961–75. MA Thesis. Quebec, Canada: McGill University.
– reference: LovemanMaraThe Modern State and the Primitive Accumulation of Symbolic PowerThe American Journal of Sociology200511061651168310.1086/428688
– reference: HuntLynnPolitics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution201620th anniversaryBerkeleyUniversity of California Press10.1525/9780520931046
– reference: OzoufMonaFestivals and the French Revolution1988CambridgeHarvard University Press
– reference: SchwartzDonaVisual Ethnography: Using Photography in Qualitative ResearchQualitative Sociology198912211915410.1007/BF00988995
– reference: Gastón-Greenberg, Javier. 2021. “Hero Genesis and Crisis: Comic Books and Identity Formation in Revolutionary Cuba.” PhD dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook, New York
– reference: AndersonBenedictImagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism1983LondonVerso
– reference: ColeJohnnetta BReedGail AWomen in Cuba: Old Problems and New IdeasUrban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development1986153/4321353
– reference: ChuangTiffany JFrom Modern Urban Resident to Sociable Urban Citizen: The Making of Spatial-Political Subjectivity through Public Housing in Singapore, 1972–2021Theory and Society202251583587010.1007/s11186-022-09485-1
– reference: SewellWilliam HamiltonA Rhetoric of Bourgeois Revolution: The Abbé Sieyes and What Is the Third Estate?1994DurhamDuke University Press10.2307/j.ctv11sn152
– reference: LeoGrandeWilliam MThe Revolution in Nicaragua: Another Cuba?Foreign Affairs197958285010.2307/20040337
– reference: SkarpelisAKMHorror Vacui: Racial Misalignment, Symbolic Repair, and Imperial Legitimation in German National Socialist Portrait PhotographyAmerican Journal of Sociology2023129231338310.1086/727562
– reference: Marx, Karl. 1978. The Marx-Engels Reader, R. C. Tucker (ed.). New York: Norton.
– reference: ForanJohnStudying Revolutions through the Prism of Race, Gender, and Class: Notes toward a FrameworkRace, Gender & Class200182117141
– reference: FábregasMoyaJohannaIThe Cuban Woman’s Revolutionary Experience: Patriarchal Culture and the State’s Gender Ideology, 1950–1976Journal of Women’s History2010221618410.1353/jowh.0.0134
– reference: BengelsdorfCarolleeOn the Problem of Studying Women in Cuba: For LourdesRace & Class1985272355010.1177/030639688502700203
– reference: World Bank. 2022b. “Population Ages 65 and above, Female - Cuba | Data.” Accessed January 25, 2023. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.65UP.FE.IN?locations=CU.
– reference: DanielPatriciaOxfam Canada in Cuba: Gender Injustice, a Key Obstacle to DevelopmentCuban Studies2012421525610.1353/cub.2011.0024
– reference: SnyderEmily CGender, Power, and Female RevolutionariesLatin American Research Review202358369470510.1017/lar.2022.85
– reference: QasmiAli UsmanA Master Narrative for the History of Pakistan: Tracing the Origins of an Ideological AgendaModern Asian Studies20195341066110510.1017/S0026749X17000427
– reference: BuckSarah AConstructing a Historiography of Mexican Women and GenderGender & History200820115216010.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00508.x
– reference: SkocpolThedaStates and Social Revolutions a Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China1979Cambridge and New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9780511815805
– reference: VaughanMary KayLewisStephen EVaughanMKLewisSEIntroductionThe Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–19402006DurhamDuke University Press
– reference: SerraAnaThe “New Man” in Cuba: Culture and Identity in the Revolution2007GainesvilleUniversity Press of Florida
– reference: BurnsGeneIdeology, Culture, and Ambiguity: The Revolutionary Process in IranTheory and Society199625334938810.1007/BF00158262
– reference: EvansHarrietDonaldStephanieEvansHDonaldSIntroducing Posters of China’s Cultural RevolutionPicturing Power in the People’s Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution1999New YorkRowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc.126
– reference: FernándezAcevesTeresaMariaVaughanMKLewisSGuadalajaran Women and the Construction of National IdentityThe Eagle and the Virgin: National and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–19402006Durham, NCDuke University Press29731310.1215/9780822387527-015
– reference: SucharCharles SGrounding Visual Sociology Research in Shooting ScriptsQualitative Sociology1997201335510.1023/A:1024712230783
– reference: Fleites-LearMariselaMirrors in the KitchenFood, Culture & Society201215224126010.2752/175174412X13233545145264
– reference: KodrichKrisThe Role of State Advertising in Latin American Newspapers: Was the Demise of Nicaragua’s Barricada Newspaper Political Sabotage?Bulletin of Latin American Research2008271618210.1111/j.1470-9856.2007.00257.x
– reference: SandersNicholeGender and Welfare Reform in Post- Revolutionary MexicoGender & History200820117017510.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00512.x
– reference: BellShannonThe Political-Libidinal Economy of the Socialist Female Body: Flesh and Blood, Work and IdeasDialectical Anthropology1990152/324925810.1007/BF00264656
– reference: BensonDevyn SpenceSara Gómez: Afrocubana (Afro-Cuban Women’s) Activism after 1961Cuban Studies20184613415810.1353/cub.2018.0008
– reference: HannaLaniTricontinental’s International Solidarity: Emotion in OSPAAAL as Tactic to Catalyze Support of RevolutionRadical History Review2020202013616918410.1215/01636545-7857344
– reference: HermanRebeccaAn Army of Educators: Gender, Revolution and the Cuban Literacy Campaign of 1961Gender & History: Oxford20122419311110.1111/j.1468-0424.2011.01670.x
– reference: SwidlerAnnCulture in Action: Symbols and StrategiesAmerican Sociological Review198651227328610.2307/2095521
– reference: HarperDouglasVisualizing Structure: Reading Surfaces of Social LifeQualitative Sociology199720577710.1023/A:1024764214854
– reference: Pérez-StableMarifeliCuban Women and the Struggle for ‘Conciencia’Cuban Studies1987175172
– reference: LecuonaRafael ACuba and Nicaragua: The Path to CommunismInternational Journal on World Peace198742105125
– reference: CastroJ. JustinRadio in Revolution: Wireless Technology and State Power in Mexico, 1897–19382016LincolnUniversity of Nebraska Press10.2307/j.ctt1d4v1bb
– reference: KyriaziAnnavom HauMatthiasTextbooks, Postcards, and the Public Consolidation of Nationalism in Latin AmericaQualitative Sociology202043451554210.1007/s11133-020-09467-8
– reference: CabreraArúsMaríaAThinking Politics and Fashion in 1960s Cuba: How Not to Judge a Book by Its CoverTheory and Society201746541142810.1007/s11186-017-9299-x
– reference: ChenTina MaiFemale Icons, Feminist Iconography? Socialist Rhetoric and Women’s Agency in 1950s ChinaGender & History200315226829510.1111/1468-0424.00303
– reference: ChinchillaNorma StoltzRevolutionary Popular Feminism in Nicaragua: Articulating Class, Gender, and National SovereigntyGender and Society19904337039710.1177/089124390004003007
– reference: AzicriMaxWomen’s Development through Revolutionary Mobilization: A Study of the Federation of Cuban WomenInternational Journal of Women’s Studies1979212750
– reference: GuevaraCheEl Socialismo y El Hombre En Cuba1965La HabanaEdiciones R
– reference: FlorianZollmannBringing Propaganda Back into News Media StudiesCritical Sociology201945332934510.1177/0896920517731134
– reference: ManningKimberley EnsMarxist Maternalism, Memory, and the Mobilization of Women in the Great Leap ForwardChina Review20055183110
– reference: Fields, Barbara Jeanne. 1990. “Slavery, Race and Ideology in the United States of America.” New Left Review (I/181): 95–118.
– reference: LawsonChappell HBuilding the Fourth Estate: Democratization and the Rise of a Free Press in Mexico2002BerkeleyUniversity of California Press10.1525/9780520936201
– reference: SelbinEricModern Latin American Revolutions1993BoulderWestview Press
– reference: BonnellVictoria EIconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters under Lenin and Stalin1997BerkeleyUniversity of California Press
– reference: FernandesSujathaTransnationalism and Feminist Activism in Cuba: The Case of MagínPolitics & Gender20051343145210.1017/S1743923X05050117
– reference: CastroFidel“Discurso Pronunciado En El Acto de Fusión de Todas Las Organizaciones Femeninas Revolucionarias1960Havana, CubaSalón-Teatro de la CTC
– reference: HeumannSilkeGender, Sexuality, and Politics: Rethinking the Relationship Between Feminism and Sandinismo in NicaraguaSocial Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society201421229031410.1093/sp/jxu004
– reference: JosephValerieHow Thomas Nelson and Sons’ Royal Readers Textbooks Helped Instill the Standards of Whiteness into Colonized Black Caribbean Subjects and Their DescendentsTransforming Anthropology201220214615810.1111/j.1548-7466.2012.01156.x
– reference: HobsbawmEJNations and Nationalism Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality2012New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9781107295582
– reference: Bayard de VoloLorraineWomen and the Cuban Insurrection: How Gender Shaped Castro’s Victory2018CambridgeCambridge University Press10.1017/9781316823378
– reference: CabreraArúsMaríaADirty Money? The Politics of Representation in Cuban Revolutionary BanknotesVisual Studies2020352–312413510.1080/1472586X.2020.1770624
– reference: BengelsdorfCarolleeHagemanAliceEmerging from Underdevelopment: Women and Work in CubaRace & Class197819436137810.1177/030639687801900403
– reference: VaughanMary KayDoreEMolyneuxMModernizing Patriarch: State Policies, Rural Households, and Women in Mexico, 1930–1940Hidden Histories of Gender and the State in Latin America2000DurhamDuke University Press194214
– reference: MolyneuxMaxineMobilisation without Emancipation? Women’s Interests, State and Revolution in NicaraguaCritical Social Policy1984410597110.1177/026101838400401004
– reference: AzicriMaxCuba: Politics, Economics, and Society1988London and New YorkPinter Publishers
– reference: Gramsci, Antonio. 1999. The Gramsci Reader: Selected Writings, 1916-1935, D. Forgacs (ed.). London: Lawrence and Wishart.
– reference: World Bank. 2022a. “Population Ages 15-64, Female - Cuba | Data.” Accessed January 25, 2023. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.1564.FE.IN?locations=CU.
– reference: HayesJoy ElizabethVaughanMKLewisSNational Imaginings on the Air: Radio in Mexico, 1920–1950The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–19402006DurhamDuke University Press243258
– reference: ScottJoan WReflections on Women and Gender in Twentieth-Century Mexico IntroductionGender & History200820114915110.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00511.x
– reference: Regalado Someillan, Yamile. 2009. The Cartooned Revolution: Images and the Revolutionary Citizen in Cuba, 1959-1963. PhD dissertation. Maryland, United States: University of Maryland, College Park.
– reference: ZuevDennisBratchfordGaryVisual Sociology: Practices and Politics in Contested Spaces2020ChamPalgrave Macmillan10.1007/978-3-030-54510-9
– reference: OlcottJocelyn‘Worthy Wives and Mothers’: State-Sponsored Women’s Organizing in Postrevolutionary MexicoJournal of Women’s History200213410613110.1353/jowh.2002.0011
– reference: PowerMichaelFoucault and SociologyAnnual Review of Sociology201137355610.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150133
– reference: RathThomasModernizing Military Patriarchy: Gender and State-Building in Postrevolutionary Mexico, 1920–1960Journal of Social History201952380783010.1093/jsh/shx118
– reference: BerezinMabelPolitics and Culture: A Less Fissured TerrainAnnual Review of Sociology19972313618310.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.361
– reference: CampbellJohn LIdeas, Politics, and Public PolicyAnnual Review of Sociology2002281213810.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141111
– reference: BuckSarah AMitchellSWoodAGSchellPABlissKEBuckSAMitchellSEEscandónCRRochaMESandersNSmithSThe Meaning of the Women’s Vote in Mexico, 1917–1953The Women’s Revolution in Mexico, 1910–19532006LanhamRowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated7398
– reference: AttwoodLynneCreating the New Soviet Woman: Women’s Magazines as Engineers of Female Identity, 1922–531999New YorkSt. Martin’s Press10.1057/9780333981825
– reference: LaclauErnestoChantalMouffeHegemony & Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics1985LondonVerso
– reference: GellnerErnestNations and Nationalism1983OxfordBlackwell
– reference: OliverPamela EJohnstonHank“What a Good Idea! Ideologies and Frames in Social Movement ResearchMobilization An International Quarterly200041375410.17813/maiq.5.1.g54k222086346251
– reference: LentJohn ACuban Mass Media after 25 Years of RevolutionJournalism Quarterly198562360961510.1177/107769908506200322
– reference: CraskeNikkiAmbiguities and Ambivalences in Making the Nation: Women and Politics in 20th-Century MexicoFeminist Review20057911163310.1057/palgrave.fr.9400205
– reference: HoDenise YCurating Revolution: Politics on Display in Mao’s China2018CambridgeCambridge University Press
– reference: PurcellSusan KaufmanPescatelloAnnModernizing Women for a Modern Society: The Cuban CaseFemale and Male in Latin America1973PittsburgUniversity of Pittsburgh Press25727210.2307/jj.6167287.15
– reference: ChaseMichelleRevolution within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952–19622015Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina Press10.5149/northcarolina/9781469625003.001.0001
– reference: La BelleThomas JFormal, Nonformal and Informal Education: A Holistic Perspective on Lifelong LearningInternational Review of Education198228215917510.1007/BF00598444
– reference: MoaddelMansoorLymanSMIdeology as Episodic Discourse: The Case of the Iranian RevolutionSocial Movements: Critiques, Concepts, Case-Studies, Main Trends of the Modern World1995LondonPalgrave Macmillan UK23429010.1007/978-1-349-23747-0_11
– reference: SmithBenjamin TThe Mexican Press and Civil Society, 1940–1976: Stories from the Newsroom, Stories from the Street2018Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina Press10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638089.001.0001
– reference: ValdiviaAngharad NWomen-Centered Media Communications within NicaraguaWomen and Language199015969
– reference: SnyderEmily‘Cuba, Nicaragua, Unidas Vencerán’: Official Collaborations between the Sandinista and Cuban RevolutionsThe Americas202178460963710.1017/tam.2021.5
– reference: CollierJohnJr.Visual Anthropology: Photography as a Research Method1967New YorkHolt, Rinehart and Winston
– reference: JonesAdamThe Death of Barricada: Politics and Professionalism in the Post-Sandinista PressJournalism Studies2001222435910.1080/14616700117971
– reference: FahmyShahiraNeumannRicoShooting War Or Peace Photographs? An Examination of Newswires’ Coverage of the Conflict in Gaza (2008–2009)American Behavioral Scientist2012562NPI-2610.1177/0002764211419355
– reference: CastroFidelDiscurso Pronunciado En La Clausura Del Primer Congreso Nacional de La Federacion de Mujeres Cubanas1962Havana, Cuba“Chaplin” Theater
– reference: FreirePauloPedagogy of the Oppressed201430th anniversaryNew York and LondonBloomsbury
– reference: DarlingJuanitaLatin America, Media, and Revolution: Communication in Modern Mesoamerica2008New YorkPalgrave Macmillan10.1057/9780230612006
– reference: MontoyaRosarioHouse, Street, Collective: Revolutionary Geographies and Gender Transformation in Nicaragua, 1979–99Latin American Research Review2003382619310.1353/lar.2003.0021
– reference: SmithPadulaLois MAlfredSex and Revolution: Women in Socialist Cuba1996New YorkOxford University Press
– reference: JacobsRonald NSmithPhilipRomance, Irony, and SolidaritySociological Theory1997151608010.1111/0735-2751.00023
– reference: HershfieldJoanneImagining La Chica Moderna: Women, Nation, and Visual Culture in Mexico, 1917–19362008DurhamDuke University Press10.1215/9780822389286
– reference: Wickham-CrowleyTimothy PThe Rise (And Sometimes Fall) of Guerrilla Governments in Latin AmericaSociological Forum19872347349910.1007/BF01106622
– reference: CastroFidelDiscurso Pronunciado En La Clausura de La Plenaria Nacional de La Asociacion Nacional de Agricultores Pequeños (ANAP)1962Havana, Cuba“Chaplin” Theater
– reference: FisherLillian EstelleThe Influence of the Present Mexican Revolution upon the Status of Mexican WomenThe Hispanic American Historical Review194222121122810.1215/00182168-22.1.211
– reference: MoghadamValentine MForanJGender and RevolutionsTheorizing Revolutions: New Approaches from Across the Disciplines1997London and New YorkRoutledge133162
– reference: ChomskyAvivaRewriting Gender in the New Revolutionary Song: Cuba’s Nueva Trova and BeyondRadical History Review2020202013614215510.1215/01636545-7857319
– reference: CushingIanLanguage, Discipline and ‘Teaching Like a Champion’British Educational Research Journal2021471234110.1002/berj.3696
– reference: Thomas-WoodardTiffany A‘Toward the Gates of Eternity’: Celia Sanchez Manduley and the Creation of Cuba’s New WomanCuban Studies200334115418010.1353/cub.2004.0030
– reference: BlakkisrudHelgeNozimovaShahnozaHistory Writing and Nation Building in Post-Independence TajikistanNationalities Papers201038217318910.1080/00905990903517835
– reference: CasalLourdesBerkinCRLovettCMRevolution and Conciencia: Women in CubaWomen, War, and Revolution1980New YorkHolmes & Meier183204
– reference: RodriguezLuluDimitrovaDaniela VThe Levels of Visual FramingJournal of Visual Literacy2011301486510.1080/23796529.2011.11674684
– reference: AgulhonMauriceMarianne into Battle: Republican Imagery and Symbolism in France, 1789–18801981Cambridge and New YorkCambridge University Press
– reference: Fleites-LearMarisela¡Mi Cielo, Alcánzame Las Botas!: Feminismos, Mujeres y El ‘Hombre Nuevo’ Dentro de La Revolución CubanaJournal of Iberian and Latin American Research2008141497510.1080/13260219.2008.9649893
– reference: MannMichaelThe Sources of Social Power1986Cambridge and New YorkCambridge University Press10.1017/CBO9780511570896
– reference: ZubrzyckiGenevièveHistory and the National Sensorium: Making Sense of Polish MythologyQualitative Sociology2011341215710.1007/s11133-010-9184-7
– reference: FrenchJohn DWomen in Postrevolutionary Mexico: The Emergence of a New Feminist Political HistoryLatin American Politics and Society200850217518410.1111/j.1548-2456.2008.00017.x
– reference: PetersChristabelleBustamanteMJLambeJLWhen the ‘New Man’ Met the ‘Old Man’: Guevara, Nyerere, and the Roots of Latin-AfricanismThe Revolution from Within: Cuba, 1959–19802019DurhamDuke University Press170188
– reference: Mears, Leon Glenn. 1962. Agriculture and Food Situation in Cuba. Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
– reference: NelsonLowryCuba: The Measure of a Revolution1972MinneapolisUniversity of Minnesota Press
– reference: FranceschetSusanPiscopoJennifer MThomasGwynnSupermadres, Maternal Legacies and Women’s Political Participation in Contemporary Latin AmericaJournal of Latin American Studies201648113210.1017/S0022216X15000814
– reference: TriplettJenArticulating the Pueblo Cubano: Women’s Politicization and Productivity in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959 to 1969American Sociological Review20228718010410.1177/00031224211060836
– reference: HynsonRachelLaboring for the State: Women, Family, and Work in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959–19712020CambridgeCambridge University Press10.1017/9781108105330
– reference: FreirePauloLiteracy and the Possible DreamProspects19766687110.1007/BF02220134
– reference: KnightAlanPopular Culture and the Revolutionary State in Mexico, 1910–1940Hispanic American Historical Review199474339344410.1215/00182168-74.3.393
– reference: CabreraArúsMaríaAForbesMThe Life of Others: Collecting and Archiving the Cuban Surveillance RegimeInternational Perspectives on Publishing Platforms: Image, Object, Text2019New YorkRoutledge133150
– reference: KodrichKrisTradition and Change in the Nicaraguan Press: Newspapers and Journalists in a New Democratic Era2002LanhamUniversity Press of America
– reference: Bayard de VoloLorraineMothers of Heroes and Martyrs: Gender Identity Politics in Nicaragua, 1979–19992001BaltimoreJohns Hopkins University Press10.56021/9780801867644
– reference: GoldSteven JIntroductionQualitative Sociology19972013610.1023/A:1024719029875
– reference: GrandinGregCan the Subaltern Be Seen? Photography and the Affects of NationalismHispanic American Historical Review20048418311110.1215/00182168-84-1-83
– volume: 2
  start-page: 243
  issue: 2
  year: 2001
  ident: 9560_CR76
  publication-title: Journalism Studies
  doi: 10.1080/14616700117971
– volume: 28
  start-page: 159
  issue: 2
  year: 1982
  ident: 9560_CR82
  publication-title: International Review of Education
  doi: 10.1007/BF00598444
– volume: 58
  start-page: 694
  issue: 3
  year: 2023
  ident: 9560_CR123
  publication-title: Latin American Research Review
  doi: 10.1017/lar.2022.85
– volume: 136
  start-page: 50
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR121
  publication-title: Radical History Review
  doi: 10.1215/01636545-7857259
– volume: 14
  start-page: 49
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR48
  publication-title: Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research
  doi: 10.1080/13260219.2008.9649893
– volume: 15
  start-page: 321
  issue: 3/4
  year: 1986
  ident: 9560_CR33
  publication-title: Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development
– volume: 8
  start-page: 117
  issue: 2
  year: 2001
  ident: 9560_CR51
  publication-title: Race, Gender & Class
– volume: 48
  start-page: 1
  issue: 1
  year: 2016
  ident: 9560_CR52
  publication-title: Journal of Latin American Studies
  doi: 10.1017/S0022216X15000814
– volume: 43
  start-page: 515
  issue: 4
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR81
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1007/s11133-020-09467-8
– ident: 9560_CR124
– volume-title: Latin America, Media, and Revolution: Communication in Modern Mesoamerica
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR39
  doi: 10.1057/9780230612006
– volume: 20
  start-page: 57
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR66
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1023/A:1024764214854
– volume-title: States and Social Revolutions a Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China
  year: 1979
  ident: 9560_CR118
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511815805
– volume: 4
  start-page: 295
  issue: 2
  year: 1986
  ident: 9560_CR41
  publication-title: Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice
– volume: 87
  start-page: 80
  issue: 1
  year: 2022
  ident: 9560_CR129
  publication-title: American Sociological Review
  doi: 10.1177/00031224211060836
– volume-title: The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940
  year: 2006
  ident: 9560_CR132
– volume: 20
  start-page: 146
  issue: 2
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR77
  publication-title: Transforming Anthropology
  doi: 10.1111/j.1548-7466.2012.01156.x
– volume: 20
  start-page: 149
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR113
  publication-title: Gender & History
  doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00511.x
– volume: 37
  start-page: 35
  year: 2011
  ident: 9560_CR105
  publication-title: Annual Review of Sociology
  doi: 10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150133
– volume: 110
  start-page: 1651
  issue: 6
  year: 2005
  ident: 9560_CR88
  publication-title: The American Journal of Sociology
  doi: 10.1086/428688
– start-page: 170
  volume-title: The Revolution from Within: Cuba, 1959–1980
  year: 2019
  ident: 9560_CR103
– volume: 77
  start-page: 621
  issue: 4
  year: 2018
  ident: 9560_CR102
  publication-title: The Russian Review
  doi: 10.1111/russ.12202
– volume: 53
  start-page: 1066
  issue: 4
  year: 2019
  ident: 9560_CR107
  publication-title: Modern Asian Studies
  doi: 10.1017/S0026749X17000427
– volume-title: Modern Latin American Revolutions
  year: 1993
  ident: 9560_CR114
– volume: 1
  start-page: 3
  issue: 1
  year: 1974
  ident: 9560_CR8
  publication-title: Studies in the Anthropology of Visual Communication
  doi: 10.1525/var.1974.1.1.3
– volume: 47
  start-page: 23
  issue: 1
  year: 2021
  ident: 9560_CR37
  publication-title: British Educational Research Journal
  doi: 10.1002/berj.3696
– volume-title: Culture, Society, and the Media
  year: 1982
  ident: 9560_CR134
– volume: 58
  start-page: 28
  year: 1979
  ident: 9560_CR87
  publication-title: Foreign Affairs
  doi: 10.2307/20040337
– volume-title: Visions of Power in Cuba: Revolution, Redemption, and Resistance, 1959–1971
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR63
  doi: 10.5149/9780807837368_guerra
– volume-title: Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  year: 2014
  ident: 9560_CR54
– volume: 4
  start-page: 59
  issue: 10
  year: 1984
  ident: 9560_CR95
  publication-title: Critical Social Policy
  doi: 10.1177/026101838400401004
– volume: 4
  start-page: 105
  issue: 2
  year: 1987
  ident: 9560_CR85
  publication-title: International Journal on World Peace
– volume-title: Women and the Cuban Insurrection: How Gender Shaped Castro’s Victory
  year: 2018
  ident: 9560_CR7
  doi: 10.1017/9781316823378
– volume: 15
  start-page: 268
  issue: 2
  year: 2003
  ident: 9560_CR29
  publication-title: Gender & History
  doi: 10.1111/1468-0424.00303
– volume: 22
  start-page: 61
  issue: 1
  year: 2010
  ident: 9560_CR42
  publication-title: Journal of Women’s History
  doi: 10.1353/jowh.0.0134
– start-page: 133
  volume-title: International Perspectives on Publishing Platforms: Image, Object, Text
  year: 2019
  ident: 9560_CR20
– volume-title: Creating the New Soviet Woman: Women’s Magazines as Engineers of Female Identity, 1922–53
  year: 1999
  ident: 9560_CR3
  doi: 10.1057/9780333981825
– ident: 9560_CR56
– volume-title: Marianne into Battle: Republican Imagery and Symbolism in France, 1789–1880
  year: 1981
  ident: 9560_CR1
– volume-title: Laboring for the State: Women, Family, and Work in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959–1971
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR74
  doi: 10.1017/9781108105330
– volume: 46
  start-page: 411
  issue: 5
  year: 2017
  ident: 9560_CR19
  publication-title: Theory and Society
  doi: 10.1007/s11186-017-9299-x
– volume-title: The “New Man” in Cuba: Culture and Identity in the Revolution
  year: 2007
  ident: 9560_CR115
– volume-title: El Socialismo y El Hombre En Cuba
  year: 1965
  ident: 9560_CR64
– volume: 8
  start-page: 27
  issue: 1
  year: 2016
  ident: 9560_CR109
  publication-title: Design and Culture
  doi: 10.1080/17547075.2016.1142337
– volume-title: Hegemony & Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics
  year: 1985
  ident: 9560_CR83
– volume-title: Sex and Revolution: Women in Socialist Cuba
  year: 1996
  ident: 9560_CR120
– ident: 9560_CR46
– volume: 13
  start-page: 106
  issue: 4
  year: 2002
  ident: 9560_CR98
  publication-title: Journal of Women’s History
  doi: 10.1353/jowh.2002.0011
– volume-title: Building the Fourth Estate: Democratization and the Rise of a Free Press in Mexico
  year: 2002
  ident: 9560_CR84
  doi: 10.1525/9780520936201
– volume: 20
  start-page: 152
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR17
  publication-title: Gender & History
  doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00508.x
– volume-title: Tradition and Change in the Nicaraguan Press: Newspapers and Journalists in a New Democratic Era
  year: 2002
  ident: 9560_CR79
– volume: 20
  start-page: 170
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR111
  publication-title: Gender & History
  doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2007.00512.x
– volume: 37
  start-page: 109
  issue: 1
  year: 2011
  ident: 9560_CR104
  publication-title: Annual Review of Sociology
  doi: 10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150106
– volume: 42
  start-page: 52
  issue: 1
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR38
  publication-title: Cuban Studies
  doi: 10.1353/cub.2011.0024
– ident: 9560_CR91
– volume: 15
  start-page: 249
  issue: 2/3
  year: 1990
  ident: 9560_CR9
  publication-title: Dialectical Anthropology
  doi: 10.1007/BF00264656
– volume: 15
  start-page: 241
  issue: 2
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR49
  publication-title: Food, Culture & Society
  doi: 10.2752/175174412X13233545145264
– volume: 20
  start-page: 33
  issue: 1
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR125
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1023/A:1024712230783
– volume: 78
  start-page: 609
  issue: 4
  year: 2021
  ident: 9560_CR122
  publication-title: The Americas
  doi: 10.1017/tam.2021.5
– volume: 27
  start-page: 61
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR80
  publication-title: Bulletin of Latin American Research
  doi: 10.1111/j.1470-9856.2007.00257.x
– volume: 23
  start-page: 361
  issue: 1
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR13
  publication-title: Annual Review of Sociology
  doi: 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.361
– volume-title: Attacking Rural Poverty: How Nonformal Education Can Help
  year: 1974
  ident: 9560_CR35
– volume: 34
  start-page: 21
  issue: 1
  year: 2011
  ident: 9560_CR137
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1007/s11133-010-9184-7
– volume-title: Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism
  year: 1983
  ident: 9560_CR2
– volume: 24
  start-page: 93
  issue: 1
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR68
  publication-title: Gender & History: Oxford
  doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2011.01670.x
– start-page: 234
  volume-title: Social Movements: Critiques, Concepts, Case-Studies, Main Trends of the Modern World
  year: 1995
  ident: 9560_CR93
  doi: 10.1007/978-1-349-23747-0_11
– volume: 6
  start-page: 68
  year: 1976
  ident: 9560_CR53
  publication-title: Prospects
  doi: 10.1007/BF02220134
– volume: 51
  start-page: 273
  issue: 2
  year: 1986
  ident: 9560_CR126
  publication-title: American Sociological Review
  doi: 10.2307/2095521
– start-page: 243
  volume-title: The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940
  year: 2006
  ident: 9560_CR67
– volume: 74
  start-page: 393
  issue: 3
  year: 1994
  ident: 9560_CR78
  publication-title: Hispanic American Historical Review
  doi: 10.1215/00182168-74.3.393
– volume: 22
  start-page: 211
  issue: 1
  year: 1942
  ident: 9560_CR47
  publication-title: The Hispanic American Historical Review
  doi: 10.1215/00182168-22.1.211
– volume: 27
  start-page: 35
  issue: 2
  year: 1985
  ident: 9560_CR10
  publication-title: Race & Class
  doi: 10.1177/030639688502700203
– volume-title: Revolution within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952–1962
  year: 2015
  ident: 9560_CR28
  doi: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469625003.001.0001
– volume: 48
  start-page: 781
  issue: 6
  year: 1983
  ident: 9560_CR58
  publication-title: American Sociological Review
  doi: 10.2307/2095325
– volume: 2020
  start-page: 169
  issue: 136
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR65
  publication-title: Radical History Review
  doi: 10.1215/01636545-7857344
– volume: 12
  start-page: 119
  issue: 2
  year: 1989
  ident: 9560_CR112
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1007/BF00988995
– volume: 2020
  start-page: 142
  issue: 136
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR31
  publication-title: Radical History Review
  doi: 10.1215/01636545-7857319
– volume-title: Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution
  year: 2016
  ident: 9560_CR73
  doi: 10.1525/9780520931046
– ident: 9560_CR136
– volume: 2
  start-page: 473
  issue: 3
  year: 1987
  ident: 9560_CR133
  publication-title: Sociological Forum
  doi: 10.1007/BF01106622
– volume: 84
  start-page: 83
  issue: 1
  year: 2004
  ident: 9560_CR62
  publication-title: Hispanic American Historical Review
  doi: 10.1215/00182168-84-1-83
– volume-title: Mothers of Heroes and Martyrs: Gender Identity Politics in Nicaragua, 1979–1999
  year: 2001
  ident: 9560_CR6
  doi: 10.56021/9780801867644
– volume: 38
  start-page: 61
  issue: 2
  year: 2003
  ident: 9560_CR96
  publication-title: Latin American Research Review
  doi: 10.1353/lar.2003.0021
– volume-title: Curating Revolution: Politics on Display in Mao’s China
  year: 2018
  ident: 9560_CR71
– volume: 2
  start-page: 27
  issue: 1
  year: 1979
  ident: 9560_CR4
  publication-title: International Journal of Women’s Studies
– volume-title: Iconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters under Lenin and Stalin
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR15
– volume-title: Radio in Revolution: Wireless Technology and State Power in Mexico, 1897–1938
  year: 2016
  ident: 9560_CR27
  doi: 10.2307/j.ctt1d4v1bb
– volume: 52
  start-page: 807
  issue: 3
  year: 2019
  ident: 9560_CR108
  publication-title: Journal of Social History
  doi: 10.1093/jsh/shx118
– ident: 9560_CR60
– volume: 35
  start-page: 110
  issue: 1
  year: 1991
  ident: 9560_CR128
  publication-title: Comparative Education Review
  doi: 10.1086/446998
– volume: 79
  start-page: 116
  issue: 1
  year: 2005
  ident: 9560_CR36
  publication-title: Feminist Review
  doi: 10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400205
– volume: 1
  start-page: 431
  issue: 3
  year: 2005
  ident: 9560_CR44
  publication-title: Politics & Gender
  doi: 10.1017/S1743923X05050117
– volume: 56
  start-page: NPI-26
  issue: 2
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR43
  publication-title: American Behavioral Scientist
  doi: 10.1177/0002764211419355
– volume: 50
  start-page: 175
  issue: 2
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR55
  publication-title: Latin American Politics and Society
  doi: 10.1111/j.1548-2456.2008.00017.x
– volume-title: The Mexican Press and Civil Society, 1940–1976: Stories from the Newsroom, Stories from the Street
  year: 2018
  ident: 9560_CR119
  doi: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638089.001.0001
– volume: 17
  start-page: 51
  year: 1987
  ident: 9560_CR101
  publication-title: Cuban Studies
– volume: 1
  start-page: 59
  year: 1990
  ident: 9560_CR130
  publication-title: Women and Language
– volume-title: Visual Sociology: Practices and Politics in Contested Spaces
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR138
  doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-54510-9
– volume: 38
  start-page: 173
  issue: 2
  year: 2010
  ident: 9560_CR14
  publication-title: Nationalities Papers
  doi: 10.1080/00905990903517835
– start-page: 297
  volume-title: The Eagle and the Virgin: National and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940
  year: 2006
  ident: 9560_CR45
  doi: 10.1215/9780822387527-015
– start-page: 194
  volume-title: Hidden Histories of Gender and the State in Latin America
  year: 2000
  ident: 9560_CR131
– volume: 51
  start-page: 835
  issue: 5
  year: 2022
  ident: 9560_CR32
  publication-title: Theory and Society
  doi: 10.1007/s11186-022-09485-1
– volume: 28
  start-page: 21
  issue: 1
  year: 2002
  ident: 9560_CR22
  publication-title: Annual Review of Sociology
  doi: 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141111
– volume-title: Festivals and the French Revolution
  year: 1988
  ident: 9560_CR100
– volume-title: A Rhetoric of Bourgeois Revolution: The Abbé Sieyes and What Is the Third Estate?
  year: 1994
  ident: 9560_CR116
  doi: 10.2307/j.ctv11sn152
– volume: 129
  start-page: 313
  issue: 2
  year: 2023
  ident: 9560_CR117
  publication-title: American Journal of Sociology
  doi: 10.1086/727562
– volume-title: The Sources of Social Power
  year: 1986
  ident: 9560_CR89
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511570896
– start-page: 73
  volume-title: The Women’s Revolution in Mexico, 1910–1953
  year: 2006
  ident: 9560_CR16
– start-page: 257
  volume-title: Female and Male in Latin America
  year: 1973
  ident: 9560_CR106
  doi: 10.2307/jj.6167287.15
– volume-title: Visual Anthropology: Photography as a Research Method
  year: 1967
  ident: 9560_CR34
– volume-title: Nations and Nationalism
  year: 1983
  ident: 9560_CR57
– volume-title: Cuba: Politics, Economics, and Society
  year: 1988
  ident: 9560_CR5
– volume: 4
  start-page: 37
  issue: 1
  year: 2000
  ident: 9560_CR99
  publication-title: Mobilization An International Quarterly
  doi: 10.17813/maiq.5.1.g54k222086346251
– volume-title: Cuba: The Measure of a Revolution
  year: 1972
  ident: 9560_CR97
– volume: 35
  start-page: 124
  issue: 2–3
  year: 2020
  ident: 9560_CR21
  publication-title: Visual Studies
  doi: 10.1080/1472586X.2020.1770624
– volume: 5
  start-page: 83
  issue: 1
  year: 2005
  ident: 9560_CR90
  publication-title: China Review
– volume-title: Nations and Nationalism Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality
  year: 2012
  ident: 9560_CR72
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9781107295582
– volume: 45
  start-page: 329
  issue: 3
  year: 2019
  ident: 9560_CR50
  publication-title: Critical Sociology
  doi: 10.1177/0896920517731134
– volume: 21
  start-page: 290
  issue: 2
  year: 2014
  ident: 9560_CR70
  publication-title: Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society
  doi: 10.1093/sp/jxu004
– start-page: 183
  volume-title: Women, War, and Revolution
  year: 1980
  ident: 9560_CR23
– volume-title: Discurso Pronunciado En La Clausura Del Primer Congreso Nacional de La Federacion de Mujeres Cubanas
  year: 1962
  ident: 9560_CR26
– volume: 20
  start-page: 3
  issue: 1
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR59
  publication-title: Qualitative Sociology
  doi: 10.1023/A:1024719029875
– volume: 46
  start-page: 134
  year: 2018
  ident: 9560_CR12
  publication-title: Cuban Studies
  doi: 10.1353/cub.2018.0008
– ident: 9560_CR135
– start-page: 1
  volume-title: Picturing Power in the People’s Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution
  year: 1999
  ident: 9560_CR40
– volume: 30
  start-page: 48
  issue: 1
  year: 2011
  ident: 9560_CR110
  publication-title: Journal of Visual Literacy
  doi: 10.1080/23796529.2011.11674684
– volume: 34
  start-page: 154
  issue: 1
  year: 2003
  ident: 9560_CR127
  publication-title: Cuban Studies
  doi: 10.1353/cub.2004.0030
– volume: 15
  start-page: 60
  issue: 1
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR75
  publication-title: Sociological Theory
  doi: 10.1111/0735-2751.00023
– volume: 62
  start-page: 609
  issue: 3
  year: 1985
  ident: 9560_CR86
  publication-title: Journalism Quarterly
  doi: 10.1177/107769908506200322
– volume: 19
  start-page: 361
  issue: 4
  year: 1978
  ident: 9560_CR11
  publication-title: Race & Class
  doi: 10.1177/030639687801900403
– ident: 9560_CR61
– volume: 4
  start-page: 370
  issue: 3
  year: 1990
  ident: 9560_CR30
  publication-title: Gender and Society
  doi: 10.1177/089124390004003007
– ident: 9560_CR92
– volume: 25
  start-page: 349
  issue: 3
  year: 1996
  ident: 9560_CR18
  publication-title: Theory and Society
  doi: 10.1007/BF00158262
– volume-title: Discurso Pronunciado En La Clausura de La Plenaria Nacional de La Asociacion Nacional de Agricultores Pequeños (ANAP)
  year: 1962
  ident: 9560_CR25
– start-page: 133
  volume-title: Theorizing Revolutions: New Approaches from Across the Disciplines
  year: 1997
  ident: 9560_CR94
– volume-title: “Discurso Pronunciado En El Acto de Fusión de Todas Las Organizaciones Femeninas Revolucionarias
  year: 1960
  ident: 9560_CR24
– volume-title: Imagining La Chica Moderna: Women, Nation, and Visual Culture in Mexico, 1917–1936
  year: 2008
  ident: 9560_CR69
  doi: 10.1215/9780822389286
SSID ssj0010046
Score 2.3433418
Snippet Within elite-led projects of ideological transformation, how do leaders encourage practices that reflect and reinforce the ideas, attitudes, and beliefs they...
SourceID proquest
crossref
springer
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 325
SubjectTerms Attitudes
Cross Cultural Psychology
Hegemony
Ideology
Legislation
Mass media
Mass media effects
Personality and Social Psychology
Political elites
Political leadership
Qualitative research
Revolutions
Social Sciences
Socialism
Sociology
Transformation
Women
SummonAdditionalLinks – databaseName: ProQuest Central
  dbid: BENPR
  link: http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV1LS8NAEF58XLyIT2x9MAfxYhfbNEmTk2i1VEERsdhb2FegoEntC3rzh-if85c4k2waFPS8sIedycw3M_m-YexYkBisboRYm2iHu740XDRDzT2DuQrTpfYltQbu7v1uz73te33bcBvb3yqLmJgFap0q6pGfEVLGgBvWnfPhG6etUTRdtSs0ltkqhuAAPXz18vr-4XExR6DyL1f3djiJrVvaTE6ea2B9xjFHcRLjq3PnZ2oq8eavEWmWeTobbN1CRrjIbbzJlkyyxaoLpgmcQM6xhVzyY77NZjfaFEENaCVn-jLIdyfVACMFtV6gU7AWayASDYgD4WowVtQ8mBloWywJaZwdfb1_YDiE5_RVJF_vnzBI4NHMrNuK0RzaUyl2WK9z_dTucrtggSunVZ9w35eNwNfNmOissWkYo4QIHeW5fhAi9IsNFoRSeUoGoYkDLXWsRCuWSvjCtLRu7rKVJE3MHgNEDp4nMR0Gzdh1vboIJNFDlBYk_yKDCjst3jYa5joaUamYTJaI0BJRZonIqbCD4vkj-02No9IDKqxWmKQ8_vu26v-37bM1J_MCaq0csJXJaGoOEWlM5JF1p2-nltJI
  priority: 102
  providerName: ProQuest
Title Ideological Consolidation, Subject Formation, and the Discursive Creation of the “New Woman” in Revolutionary Cuba
URI https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11133-024-09560-2
https://www.proquest.com/docview/3064413902
Volume 47
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwlV1LS8NAEF7EXryIT2ytZQ7ixS4kaZImx1pbq2KRYrGewr4CBU2kL-itP0T_XH-Js3k0KHrwlMOEPexM5puZzfctIedMi8FK08feRFrUdrmirOFL6ijEKoRL6XI9Gnjou72hfTdyRhkpbJr_7Z4fSSaZuiC7mdhPUcQUqsXzDIqJt-Rg767jemi1NmcHuuVLFb0tqgXWM6rM72t8h6OixvxxLJqgTXeP7GZlIrRSv-6TLRUdkMqGXQIXkPJqIZX5WB6Sxa1UeSIDfQ1n_DpO70uqA2YHPW6Bbs5UrAOLJGDtB9fjqdADg4WCdlY_QhwmpvXqA1MgPMdvLFqvPmEcwUAtslBlkyW055wdkWG389Tu0exSBSqspjGjrstNz5WNUFNYQ2UqJRjzLeHYrudjuRcqbAK5cAT3fBV6kstQsGbIBXOZakrZOCbbURypEwJYLTgORwj0GqFtOwbzuKaECMm05Av3yuQy39vgPdXOCAqVZO2JAD0RJJ4IrDKp5tsfZN_RNND9EcKsb6C5nrukMP-9WuV_r5-SHSuJCj1eqZLt2WSuzrDamPEaKbVuXu47-Lzq9B8HtSTYvgBkw9D_
linkProvider Springer Nature
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV3JThtBEC2BOYQLyoYwIUkdklziVuyexTOHKEoMls1iIQSC29DbSJbIDMHGkW98SPIL-Si-JFWzYBEp3Di31Ieu6qpX1f1eAbxTLAZrOzHVJlYKP9ROKC-2InCUqyhd2lBza-BgFA5O_N2z4GwJ_tRcGP5WWcfEIlDb3HCP_BMjZQq4cVt-ufwheGoUv67WIzRKt9hz859Usk0-D7fJvu-l7O8c9waimiogjOy2pyIMdScKrZcyhzN1HeeMUrE0gR9GMeGd1FEVpE1gdBS7NLLapkZ1U21UqFzXWo_2XYYV3yOo0ICVbzujw6O7dwsuN0s1cSlY3L2i6ZRkvQ7Vg4JyomDxv7aQ91PhAt_-8yRbZLr-U1irICp-LX3qGSy57Dls3jFb8AOWnF4sJUbmL2A2tK4OosgjQPOLcTmrqYUUmbjVg_2aJdlClVkk3Inb44nhZsXMYa_CrpinxdLtzS8Kv3iaf1fZ7c1vHGd45GbVNVFXc-xda_USTh7l6NehkeWZ2wAkpBIEmtJv5KW-H7RVpJmOYqxiuRkdNeFjfbbJZanbkSwUmtkSCVkiKSyRyCZs1cefVHd4kiw8rgmt2iSL5f_vtvnwbm_hyeD4YD_ZH472XsGqLDyC2zpb0JheXbvXhHKm-k3lWgjnj-3NfwFjYhJ4
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV3NbhNBDLZKKiEuFbQgUgr4QLmQUZPJ7mb3gBAkjZq2RFVFRW_L_EqR2t3SpEG59UHgRXicPgn2_jSiEtx6HmkOY4_92TPfZ4A3isVgbSeh2sRKEUTaCdVNrAgd5SpKlzbS3Br4PI72ToL90_B0BX7XXBj-VlnHxCJQ29xwj3yHkTIF3KQtd3z1LeJoMPxw8V3wBCl-aa3HaZQucuAWP6h8m74fDcjW21IOd7_090Q1YUAY2WvPRBTpThzZrmc-p3cd54xSiTRhEMUJYR_vqCLSJjQ6TpyPrbbeqJ7XRkXK9azt0r4PYLXH9NEGrH7aHR8d375hcOlZKotLwULvFWWnJO51qDYUlB8FCwG2hfw7LS6x7p3n2SLrDR_DWgVX8WPpX09gxWXrsHnLcsG3WPJ7sZQbWWzAfGRdHVCRx4HmZ5NyblMLKUpx2weHNWOyhSqzSBgUB5Op4cbF3GG_wrGY-2Lp5vonhWL8mp-r7Ob6F04yPHbz6sqoywX2r7R6Cif3cvTPoJHlmXsOSKglDDWl4rjrgyBsq1gzNcVYxdIzOm7Cu_ps04tSwyNdqjWzJVKyRFpYIpVN2KqPP63u8zRdel8TWrVJlsv_3m3z_7u9hofkxenhaHzwAh7JwiG4w7MFjdnllXtJgGemX1WehfDtvp35D-QkFrY
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Ideological+Consolidation%2C+Subject+Formation%2C+and+the+Discursive+Creation+of+the+%E2%80%9CNew+Woman%E2%80%9D+in+Revolutionary+Cuba&rft.jtitle=Qualitative+sociology&rft.au=Triplett%2C+Jen&rft.date=2024-06-01&rft.pub=Springer+US&rft.issn=0162-0436&rft.eissn=1573-7837&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=325&rft.epage=358&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11133-024-09560-2&rft.externalDocID=10_1007_s11133_024_09560_2
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0162-0436&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0162-0436&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0162-0436&client=summon