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Through intimate portraits of women across three generations, María Del Socorro Castañeda-Liles depicts what it means to see family, community, and the sacred through a Mexican Catholic Imagination. Our Lady of Everyday Life powerfully demonstrates how religion works alongside race, class, gender, and sexuality to shape Chicana/Latina women's subjectivity.
Auteur
María Del Socorro Castañeda-Liles is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Santa Clara University.
Texte du rabat
For Mexican Catholic women in the United States, devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe-La Virgen-is a necessary aspect of their cultural identity. In this masterful ethnography, María Del Socorro Castañeda-Liles considers three generations of Mexican-origin women between the ages of 18 and 82. She examines the Catholic beliefs the women inherited from their mothers and how these beliefs become the template from which they first learn to see themselves as people of faith. She also offers a comprehensive analysis of how Catholicism creates a culture in which Mexican-origin women learn how to be "good girls" in a manner that reduces their agency to rubble. Through the nexus of faith and lived experience, these women develop a type of Mexican Catholic imagination that helps them challenge the sanctification of shame, guilt, and aguante (endurance at all cost). This imagination allows these women to transgress strict notions of what a good Catholic woman should be while retaining life-giving aspects of Catholicism. This transgression is most visible in their relationship to La Virgen, which is a fluid and deeply engaged process of self-awareness in everyday life.
Résumé
Our Lady of Everyday Life is an ethnographic study of three generations of Mexican origin women (college students, mothers, and older women) and their experiences growing up Catholic. The book focuses on their relationship with Our Lady of Guadalupe as central to what Castañeda-Liles calls their "Mexican Catholic imagination."
Contenu
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: "Here It Is Told"
Chapter 2: Our Lady of Café con Leche: The Social Construction of Catholic Devotion
Chapter 3: Catholicizing Girlhood: Socializing Girls into Institutional Catholicism
Chapter 4: The Making of Girls in the Mexican Catholic Imagination: Obedience, Respect, and Responsibility
Chapter 5: Becoming Señoritas: If You Can't Talk About It in Church, You Can't Talk About It Anywhere
Chapter 6: Our Lady of Everyday Life
Chapter 7: Perceptions of Our Lady of Guadalupe's Relationship to Feminism: "The Time is Now"
Chapter 8: Why do they paint her this way? She is our mother
Conclusion
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography