Women, Power, and Kinship Politics: Female Power in Post-War Philippines
By (Author) Mina Roces
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th May 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Feminism and feminist theory
Sociology: family and relationships
Asian history
305.4209599
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
539g
Politics in the Philippines is not male-dominated, but gendered. This book examines how women hold power unofficially through their kinship ties with male politicans. Examining the perspectives of local concepts of power, the author explores gender and power in post-war Philippines and characerizes kinship politics embedded in the predominate political culture. Women's power is a site here the conflict between the two discourses of kinship politics and modern nationalist values is daily contested. Unofficial women's power is resourced through kinship politics, but because it is exercised behind the scenes it makes omen vulnerable to criticisms that they are manipulative or scheming, wielding power that is illegal, undemocratic, antinationalist and unaccounatable. But, at the other end of the equation, women's curasades against graft and corruption is doubly legitimized through both the "modern" discursive prioritizing of the nation-state and through women's traditional gendered roles as moral guardians. This book will be of interest to scholars and students in Philippine studies, Southeast Asian history, gender studies, women and power in Asia, and feminist studies.
.,."a well-researched study of women in the last half of the the 20th century in the male-dominated society of the Philippines."-Choice
.,."an informative discussion of the gendering of power in post-war Phillipines and women's increasing participation in the politics of the nation, both as holders of elected office and in more traditional capacities as wives and relatives of male politicians."-Journal of Third World Studies
...a well-researched study of women in the last half of the the 20th century in the male-dominated society of the Philippines.-Choice
...an informative discussion of the gendering of power in post-war Phillipines and women's increasing participation in the politics of the nation, both as holders of elected office and in more traditional capacities as wives and relatives of male politicians.-Journal of Third World Studies
Roces' treatise enables the reader, and social scientists as well, to understand the nature of the political process in developing countries and the women's role in it....Roces provides us a very useful framework for understanding the influence, nay the power, that women, in the Philippines at least, wield.-Pacific Affairs
Should be read by anyone interested in altering the structure of society in this archipelago. Or for that matter anyone who wants to know the real score on the position of women in the Philippines....I strongly recommend it to...'must read' lists in colleges and universities.-Philippine Daily Inquirer
..."a well-researched study of women in the last half of the the 20th century in the male-dominated society of the Philippines."-Choice
..."an informative discussion of the gendering of power in post-war Phillipines and women's increasing participation in the politics of the nation, both as holders of elected office and in more traditional capacities as wives and relatives of male politicians."-Journal of Third World Studies
"Should be read by anyone interested in altering the structure of society in this archipelago. Or for that matter anyone who wants to know the real score on the position of women in the Philippines....I strongly recommend it to...'must read' lists in colleges and universities."-Philippine Daily Inquirer
"Roces' treatise enables the reader, and social scientists as well, to understand the nature of the political process in developing countries and the women's role in it....Roces provides us a very useful framework for understanding the influence, nay the power, that women, in the Philippines at least, wield."-Pacific Affairs
MINA ROCES is Senior Lecturer in the School of Humanities at Central Queensland University in Australia.