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Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare in Mexico City, 1884-1943: Engendering Latin America

Autor Ann S. Blum
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 dec 2009
When Porfirio Díaz extended his modernization initiative in Mexico to the administration of public welfare, the families and especially the children of the urban poor became a government concern. Reforming the poor through work and by bolstering Mexico’s emerging middle class were central to the government’s goals of order and progress. But Porfirian policies linking families and work often endangered the children they were supposed to protect, especially when state welfare institutions became involved in the shadowy traffic of child labor. The Mexican Revolution, which followed, generated an unprecedented surge of social reform that was focused on families and accelerated the integration of child protection into public policy, political discourse, and private life.
 
In ways that transcended the abrupt discontinuities and conflicts of the era, Porfirian officials, revolutionary leaders, and social reformers alike invoked idealized models of the Mexican family as the primary building block of society, making families, especially those of Mexico’s working classes, the object of moralizing reform in the name of state construction and national progress. Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare in Mexico City, 1884–1943 analyzes family practices and class formation in modern Mexico by examining the ways in which family-oriented public policies and institutions affected cross-class interactions as well as relations between parents and children.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780803213593
ISBN-10: 080321359X
Pagini: 396
Ilustrații: 23 b-w illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Nebraska Paperback
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Seria Engendering Latin America

Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Ann S. Blum was an associate professor of Latin American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. She is the author of numerous book chapters and articles, which have appeared in publications such as Sex in Revolution: Gender, Politics, and Power in Modern Mexico and Journal of Women’s History.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments 
List of Illustrations  
Selective Chronology  
Introduction: Childhood, Class, and Family in Mexico City  
Part 1. The Porfirian Family: Child Welfare, Child Labor, and Child Nurture, 1884<EN>1912
1. Porfirian Patterns and Meanings of Child Circulation: Child Labor and Child Welfare in the Capital City   
2. Labor or Love: Trends in Porfirian Adoption Practice    
3. Moral and Medical Economies of Motherhood: Infant Feeding at the Mexico City Foundling Home 
Part 2. Reworking the Family: Family Relations and Revolutionary Reform, 1913<EN>1943
4. The Family in the Revolutionary Order: Conceptual Foundations 
5. The Revolutionary Family: Children's Health and Collective Identities     
6. Domestic Economies: Family Dynamics, Child Labor, and Child Circulation   
7. Breaking and Making Families: Adoption, Child Labor, and Women's Work   
Conclusion: Family, Work, and Welfare in Modern Mexico     
Notes
Bibliography     
Index

Recenzii

"Blum's work is a major contribution to the nascent field of childhood history in Latin America. She draws from the historiography of gender and welfare to reflect how class, race, and gender interplayed in defining family relations and nation-state formation in modern Mexico."—Sandra Aguilar, H-Net

"Ann Blum makes an important contribution to the history of childhood, family, and labor and helps tie together labor, cultural, and political histories."—Susie S. Porter, Americas

"Blum uses an impressive array of sources—legal codes, decrees, censuses, court cases, articles, and welfare records. Her work sits at the intersection of multiple historiographies, not just family history, but also the history of women, gender, legal, labor, medical, and childhood as well."—Nicole Sanders, Mexican Studies

"[Domestic Economies] is a ground-breaking and important work that contributes not only to our understandings of family and work in Porfirian and revolutionary Mexico but also to wider historiographies of welfare, social policy, labor, and women."—Patience A. Schell, American Historical Review