尸体、披肩和火车车厢:墨西哥革命时期的妇女和迁徙家园

Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1353/bdl.2023.a911883
Tania Gutiérrez-Monroy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文考察了二十世纪初墨西哥革命期间负责建造军事纵队移动住宅的妇女的短暂建筑和场所制作实践。在这场长达十年的内战中,联邦军队和叛军在墨西哥各地动员,严重依赖与他们一起旅行的大批工人阶级妇女提供的服务。这些营地的追随者更被称为soldaderas,他们负责为士兵提供烹饪、洗衣和医疗等日常必需品,同时也为军事纵队创造临时住所。这些家庭环境在建造、使用、拆除、运输和重新建造的过程中循环发展。两件不同的文物一直是兵马俑建造和重建工作的核心:火车车厢和披肩。本文分析了他们是如何与士兵的身体一起工作的,从而产生了一个需要不断重建的家庭建筑,一个家庭建筑的偶然转变有意义地融合了制造过程和材料的延展性。这个建筑失去了它的统一性和固定性,在一系列的家庭和材料实践中展开,不再包含在一个单一的地点和时刻。
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Bodies, Shawls, and Train Cars: Women and the Traveling Homes of the Mexican Revolution
abstract: This article examines the ephemeral architectures and the place-making practices of the women in charge of building the mobile dwellings of military columns during the early twentieth-century Mexican Revolution. During this decade-long civil war, federal and rebel armies mobilized throughout Mexico and were heavily dependent on the services provided by the crowds of working-class women who traveled with them. Better known as soldaderas , these camp followers cared for the daily necessities of cooking, laundry, and health care for soldiers, while also creating ephemeral dwellings for the military columns. These domestic settings developed cyclically in a process of building, using, dismantling, transporting, and building anew. Two different artifacts remained constant and central to the building and rebuilding work of soldaderas: the train car and the shawl. This article analyzes how they worked in tandem with the bodies of soldaderas to produce a domestic architecture in need of constant rebuilding, a domestic architecture whose contingent transformation meaningfully fused the fabrication process and its material malleability. Losing its unity and fixity, this architecture unfolded in a series of domestic and material practices that were no longer contained in a single site and moment.
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