Women in the Crucible of Conquest: The Gendered Genesis of Spanish American Society, 1500-1600 (Diálogos Series)

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Description

The evidence of women in the Americas is conspicuously absent from most historical syntheses of the Spanish invasion and early colonization of the New World. Karen Powers’s ethnohistoric account is the first to concentrate on non-military incidents Right through this transformative period. As she shows, native women’s lives were changed dramatically.

Women in the Crucible of Conquest uncovers the activities and experiences of women, shows how the intersection of gender, race, and class shaped their lives, and reveals the every now and then hidden ways they were integrated into social institutions. Powers’s premise is that women were demoted in status across race and class and that some women resisted this trend. She describes the ways women made spaces for themselves in colonial society, in the economy, and in convents in addition to other religious arenas, such as witchcraft. She shows how violence and intimidation were used to keep watch over women and writes about the place of sexual relations, especially miscegenation, in the forging of colonial social and economic structures.

From Karen Vieira Powers’s Introduction:

“Right through the colonization process, indigenous women suffered, most likely, the most precipitous decline in status of any group of colonial women. Because of this, and because they were numerically superior to all other women, I have chosen to lead them to the heart of this book. Then again, the work also treats Spanish women, racially mixed women (mestizas, mulattas, zambas, and so on.), and African women.”

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