Front cover image for From colony to nation : women activists and the gendering of politics in Belize, 1912-1982

From colony to nation : women activists and the gendering of politics in Belize, 1912-1982

"The first book on women's political history in Belize, From Colony to Nation demonstrates that women were creators of and activists within the two principal political currents of twentieth-century Belize: colonial-middle class reform and popular labor-nationalism. As such, their alliances and struggles with colonial administrators, male reformers, and nationalists and with one another were central to the emergence of this improbable nation-state." "Anne S. Macpherson examines the tensions of the 1910s that led to the 1919 anticolonial riot; the reform project of the 1920s, in which Garveyite women were key state allies; the militant anticolonial labor movement of the 1930s; the more ambitious reform project of the 1940s; the successful but nonrevolutionary nationalist movement of the 1950s; and the gender dynamics of party politics and both Black Power and feminist challenges to the party system in the 1960s and 1970s." "From Colony to Nation connects to historiographies of racialized and gendered reform in colonial and other multiracial societies and of tensions between female activism and masculine authority within nationalist movements and postcolonial societies."--BOOK JACKET
Print Book, English, ©2007
University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, ©2007
History
xviii, 385 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
9780803232426, 080323242X
70839731
Introduction: "Never a coward woman"
The making of a riot: women, wages, and war on the home front, 1912-1919
A fragile peace: colonial reform, Garveyism, and the Black Cross nurses, 1920-1930
Hurricane from below: popular protest, the Labourers and Unemployed Association, and the Women's League, 1931-1941
Modernizing colonialism: development, discipline, and domestication, 1935-1954
A new paterfamilias: the creation and control of popular nationalism, 1949-1961
Negotiating nationalist patriarchy: party politics, radical masculinity, and the birth of Belizean feminism, 1961-1982
Conclusion: gender and history in the making of modern Belize