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Marching Against Gender Practice

Political Imaginings in the Basqueland
Authors:
Publisher:
 2015

Summary

Marching against Gender Practice: Political Imaginings in the Basqueland begins with the question: why is it so problematic for the majority of people in the Basque town of Hondarribia to accept the broader participation of women in their annual military march known as the Alarde? To explain this dispute, this study examines local history as well as the history of this unique parade, but most importantly considers how gender practices were and are organized. The controversy to extend female involvement in the Alarde resulted in two positions between betikoak traditionalists, (Betiko Alardearen Aldekoak, “Always the Town’s Alarde”), and local “feminists” (emakumealdekoak or Emakumeak JuanaMugarrietakoa, the Women of Mugarrietakoa, WJM), the former group wishing to preserve the ritual and the latter wanting to change it. These are not simply dichotomous stances but represent multiple levels of local identity through differing concepts of gender, history, and social experience. It will be shown throughout the Alarde’s long history (1639-present)that it represents several periods of militarism from the town’s defense in 1638 against French forces, Napoleonic resistance (1808-1813) to the Carlist Wars (1833-1840 and 1872-1876). The Alarde began as a religious procession and gradually incorporated more and more secular elements. In essence, by the end of the nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth century, the Alarde became one of many “Basque celebrations” (Euskal jaiak), tying it to Basque nationalism.

Marching against Gender Practice centers on gender analyses of two opposing gender worldviews between the betikoak traditionalists and WJM feminists, but it aims at being applicable to gender theories in general, especially how gender may be cognized and what cognitive processes and cognitive systems may be included in the cognition of gender. By implication, it is asserted that collective imagination is not an immutable or static concept but may represent locality, regionalism, and nationalism as well as imbue concepts of communality, individuality, gender, harmony, historical narration, memory, social organization, and tradition. Commemorative, historical or re-enactment rituals like the Alarde of Hondarribia explain the duration of local identity, its transformation over time, and newer expressions of identity, which are continually being contested and reaffirmed through collective imagination.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2015
ISBN-Print
978-0-7391-2521-2
ISBN-Online
978-1-4985-2773-6
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
281
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
    2. Acknowledgments No access
    3. Preface No access
    4. Introduction No access
    1. Chapter One: Locality and Ritual Space No access
    2. Chapter Two: History, Tradition, and Memory No access
    1. Chapter Three: Gendering Hondarribian Society No access
    2. Chapter Four: Institutionalizing Gender Practices No access
    3. Chapter Five: Re-Imagining Gendered Differences No access
    1. Chapter Six: WJM Militant Feminist Politics and WJM Feminist Resistance No access
  1. Conclusion No access Pages 213 - 232
  2. Postscript No access Pages 233 - 248
  3. Bibliography No access Pages 249 - 264
  4. Index No access Pages 265 - 280
  5. About the Author No access Pages 281 - 281

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