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Catholic Women and Mexican Politics, 17501940
By (Author) Margaret Chowning
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
15th January 2023
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Political science and theory
282.72082
Hardback
376
Width 155mm, Height 235mm
How women preserved the power of the Catholic Church in Mexican political life
What accounts for the enduring power of the Catholic Church, which withstood widespread and sustained anticlerical opposition in Mexico Margaret Chowning locates an answer in the untold story of how the Mexican Catholic church in the nineteenth century excluded, then accepted, and then came to depend on women as leaders in church organizations.
But much more than a study of women and the church or the feminization of piety, the book links new female lay associations beginning in the 1840s to the surprisingly early politicization of Catholic women in Mexico. Drawing on a wealth of archival materials spanning more than a century of Mexican political life, Chowning boldly argues that Catholic women played a vital role in the churchs resurrection as a political force in Mexico after liberal policies left it for dead.
Shedding light on the importance of informal political power, this book places Catholic women at the forefront of Mexican conservatism and shows how they kept loyalty to the church strong when the church itself was weak.
Margaret Chowning holds the Muriel McKevitt Sonne Chair in Latin American History at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Rebellious Nuns: The Troubled History of a Mexican Convent, 17521863 and Wealth and Power in Provincial Mexico: Michoacn from the Late Colony to the Revolution.