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| Publications of Peter Sigal :recent first alphabetical combined listing:%% Books @book{fds295681, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {From Moon Goddesses to Virgins: The Colonization of Yucatecan Maya Sexual Desire}, Publisher = {University of Texas Press}, Year = {2000}, url = {http://utpress.utexas.edu/index.php/books/sigfro}, Key = {fds295681} } @book{fds295680, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Infamous Desire: Male Homosexuality in Colonial Latin America}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2003}, url = {http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/I/bo3616886.html}, Key = {fds295680} } @book{fds306108, Author = {P. Sigal and Sigal, PH and Green, JN}, Title = {Re-Gendering Latin America}, Volume = {16}, Number = {1}, Year = {2005}, Key = {fds306108} } @book{fds295682, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The Flower and the Scorpion: Sexuality and Ritual in Early Nahua Culture}, Series = {Latin America Otherwise}, Pages = {1-361}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2011}, ISBN = {9780822351511}, url = {http://www.dukeupress.edu/Catalog/ViewProduct.php?productid=15459&viewby=title}, Abstract = {Prior to the Spanish conquest, the Nahua indigenous peoples of central Mexico did not have a notion of “sex” or “sexuality” equivalent to the sexual categories developed by colonial society or those promoted by modern Western peoples. In this innovative ethnohistory, Pete Sigal seeks to shed new light on Nahua concepts of the sexual without relying on the modern Western concept of sexuality. Along with clerical documents and other Spanish sources, he interprets the many texts produced by the Nahua. While colonial clerics worked to impose Catholic beliefs—particularly those equating sexuality and sin—on the indigenous people they encountered, the process of cultural assimilation was slower and less consistent than scholars have assumed. Sigal argues that modern researchers of sexuality have exaggerated the power of the Catholic sacrament of confession to change the ways that individuals understood themselves and their behaviors. At least until the mid-seventeenth century, when increased contact with the Spanish began to significantly change Nahua culture and society, indigenous peoples, particularly commoners, related their sexual lives and imaginations not just to concepts of sin and redemption but also to pleasure, seduction, and rituals of fertility and warfare.}, Key = {fds295682} } @book{fds371536, Author = {Sigal, P and Tortorici, Z and Whitehead, NL}, Title = {Ethnopornography Sexuality, Colonialism, and Archival Knowledge}, Publisher = {Duke University Press Books}, Year = {2019}, Month = {December}, ISBN = {9781478003847}, Abstract = {This volume's contributors explore the links among sexuality, ethnography, race, and colonial rule through an examination of ethnopornography—the eroticized observation of the Other for supposedly scientific or academic purposes.}, Key = {fds371536} } %% Journal Articles @article{fds295687, Author = {Restall, M and Sigal, P}, Title = {’May They Not Be Fornicators Equal to These Priests’: Postconquest Yucatec Maya Sexual Attitudes}, Journal = {UCLA Historical Journal}, Volume = {12}, Pages = {91-121}, Year = {1992}, Key = {fds295687} } @article{fds295688, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The politicization of pederasty among the colonial Yucatecan Maya}, Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SEXUALITY}, Volume = {8}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-24}, Year = {1997}, ISSN = {1043-4070}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1997YC95500001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Key = {fds295688} } @article{fds295689, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Ethnohistory and Homosexual Desire: A Review of Recent Works}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {45}, Number = {1}, Pages = {135-141}, Year = {1998}, Key = {fds295689} } @article{fds295671, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of Christianity and Sexuality in the Early Modern World: Regulating Desire, Reforming Practice. by Merry E. Weisner-Hanks (New York: Routledge, 2000)}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {106}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds295671} } @article{fds295672, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of The Emperor’s Mirror: Understanding Cultures through Primary Sources. by Russell J. Barber and Frances F. Berdan (Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1998)}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {48}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds295672} } @article{fds295673, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of Beyond Carnival: Male Homosexuality in Twentieth-Century Brazil. by James N. Green (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999)}, Journal = {Journal of Homosexuality}, Volume = {42}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds295673} } @article{fds295674, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Mexico’s Indigenous Past. by Alfredo López austin and Leonardo Lópex Lugan. Trans. Bernard R. Ortiz de Montellano (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001)}, Journal = {H-LatinAm}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds295674} } @article{fds295690, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {To Cross the Sexual Borderlands: The History of Sexuality in the Americas}, Journal = {Radical History Review}, Volume = {82}, Pages = {171-185}, Year = {2002}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6952 Duke open access}, Key = {fds295690} } @article{fds295691, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Gender, male homosexuality, and power in colonial Yucatán}, Journal = {Latin American Perspectives}, Volume = {29}, Number = {2}, Pages = {24-40}, Publisher = {SAGE Publications}, Year = {2002}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0094-582X}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000173903000002&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {Elites among the Maya considered passivity in males feminine and viewed the vanquished warrior as symbolically if not actually passive. The Maya nobles, lords, and priests at the time of the Spanish conquest used this notion of activity and passivity to assert their ability to harness the powers of the gods for community well-being. They ritualistically raped the gods, thus asserting themselves as the active partners to the passive gods. The Maya appear to have viewed this act as a way to harness sacred power. Maya elite discourse did not place commoners in the realm of endemic sodomy but viewed them as blind followers of the nobles. Thus, when the elites were corrupt, sodomy reigned throughout society. When "good" nobles came to power, sodomy was curtailed, perhaps to nonexistence. This discourse asserted that the commoners were followers of the nobles and that the central issue was not commoner sexuality but noble control. In both the Spanish and the Maya case, notions of same-sex sexual desires and behaviors were constructed in a gendered universe to assert the superiority of one elite faction over another. What was at stake in this discourse was nothing less than the establishment of a hegemonic ideology. This article analyzes the place that homosexual desires and acts were given in the literature of both the Maya and the Spaniards in colonial Yucatán.}, Doi = {10.1177/0094582X0202900202}, Key = {fds295691} } @article{fds295675, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of Gender and Sexuality in Latin America, special issue of Hispanic American Historical Review}, Journal = {Estudios Interdisciplinarios de America Latina y el Caribe}, Volume = {14}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds295675} } @article{fds295676, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of The Famous 41: Sexuality and Social Control in Mexico, c. 1901. by Robert McKee Irwin, Eward J. McCaughan, and Michaelle Rocio Nasser, eds. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003)}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {109}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds295676} } @article{fds295692, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The Cuiloni, the Patlache, and the Abominable Sin: Homosexualities in Early Colonial Nahua Society}, Journal = {Hispanic American Historical Review}, Volume = {85}, Number = {4}, Pages = {555-593}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2005}, Month = {November}, ISSN = {0018-2168}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000233056100001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00182168-85-4-555}, Key = {fds295692} } @article{fds295677, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of False Mystics: Deviant Orthodoxy in Colonial Mexico. by Nora E. Jaffary (Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 2004)}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {111}, Year = {2006}, Month = {February}, Key = {fds295677} } @article{fds324375, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {NORA E. JAFFARY. False Mystics: Deviant Orthodoxy in Colonial Mexico. (Engendering Latin America.) Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. 2004. Pp. xvi, 257. $49.95}, Journal = {The American Historical Review}, Volume = {111}, Number = {1}, Pages = {239-240}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2006}, Month = {February}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.111.1.239}, Doi = {10.1086/ahr.111.1.239}, Key = {fds324375} } @article{fds324374, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The Origins of Mexican Catholicism: Nahua Rituals and Christian Sacraments in Sixteenth-Century Mexico}, Journal = {COLONIAL LATIN AMERICAN REVIEW}, Volume = {16}, Number = {1}, Pages = {127-129}, Year = {2007}, Key = {fds324374} } @article{fds306107, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Sexual Encounters/Sexual Collisions: Alternative Sexualities in Colonial Mesoamerica}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {54}, Number = {1}, Editor = {Sigal, P and Chuchiak, J}, Year = {2007}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds306107} } @article{fds295678, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of The Origins of Mexican Catholicism: Nahua Rituals and Christian Sacraments in Sixteenth-Century Mexico. By Osvaldo F. Pardo (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2004)}, Journal = {Colonial Latin American Review}, Volume = {16}, Year = {2007}, Month = {June}, Key = {fds295678} } @article{fds295685, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Queer Nahuatl: Sahagún's faggots and sodomites, lesbians and hermaphrodites}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {54}, Number = {1}, Pages = {9-34}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2007}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {0014-1801}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000243649900003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {This article provides a method for interpreting the place of sexuality in texts that defy analysis. The author uses one source, the Florentine Codex, a large and complex bilingual Nahuatl and Spanish document, to decipher some elements about cross-dressing individuals, homosexualities, and gender inversions in Nahua society at the time of the Spanish conquest. The methodology used combines close narrative analysis with intellectual genealogy. The author argues that decoding the texts in this way allows us to uncover a cross-dressing male who engaged in "passive" homosexual acts and had a degraded but institutionalized role to play. Copyright 2007 by American Society for Ethnohistory.}, Doi = {10.1215/00141801-2006-038}, Key = {fds295685} } @article{fds324373, Author = {Sigal, P and Chuchiak IV and JF}, Title = {Ethnohistory: Guest Editors' Introduction}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {54}, Number = {1}, Pages = {3-8}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2007}, Month = {December}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2006-037}, Doi = {10.1215/00141801-2006-037}, Key = {fds324373} } @article{fds295679, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Review of The Memory of Bones: Body, Being, and Experience among the Classic Maya. By Stephen Houston, David Stuart, and Karl Taube (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006)}, Journal = {Hispanic American Historical Review}, Volume = {88}, Year = {2008}, Month = {May}, Key = {fds295679} } @article{fds324372, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The Memory of Bones: Body, Being, and Experience among the Classic Maya}, Journal = {Hispanic American Historical Review}, Volume = {88}, Number = {2}, Pages = {302-303}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2008}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2007-130}, Doi = {10.1215/00182168-2007-130}, Key = {fds324372} } @article{fds295686, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Latin America and the challenge of globalizing the history of sexuality.}, Journal = {The American historical review}, Volume = {114}, Number = {5}, Pages = {1340-1353}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2009}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {0002-8762}, url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20425925}, Doi = {10.1086/ahr.114.5.1340}, Key = {fds295686} } @article{fds295684, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Imagining Cihuacoatl: Mexica Masculinity and Spanish Colonization}, Journal = {Gender & History}, Volume = {22}, Number = {3}, Pages = {538-563}, Publisher = {WILEY}, Year = {2010}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0424.2010.01610.x}, Abstract = {'Imagining Cihuacoatl' examines the conundrum of the multiple identities of the 'serpent woman', a Mexica goddess, analysing her relationship with other goddesses in the Nahua pantheon. She and the others were marked in a particular sexualised and gendered manner in the Nahua world. This article argues that Cihuacoatl and the fertility goddesses cannot be conceptualised in a symbolic universe that has binary divisions between male and female, nor can they be analysed by the methods currently employed in the social and cultural history of sexuality. This article follows images of various goddesses of warfare and fertility from pre-conquest and early post-conquest texts, suggesting ways in which the Spanish attempted to reconceptualise all of them into a framework of demonic sin. 'Imagining Cihuacoatl' will interrogate the sexual performance involved in Nahua ritual, lost in the translation not just from Nahuatl to Spanish but from a system that linked sex with rites of fertility to one that linked sex with sin. 'Imagining Cihuacoatl' shows that Gayle Rubin's call to develop a theory of sexuality separate from gender is a project fraught with contradictions, and one that remains incomplete. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.}, Doi = {10.1111/j.1468-0424.2010.01610.x}, Key = {fds295684} } @article{fds376385, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Imagining Cihuacoatl: Masculine Rituals, Nahua Goddesses and the Texts of the Tlacuilos}, Journal = {Gender and History}, Volume = {22}, Number = {3}, Pages = {538-563}, Year = {2010}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0424.2010.01610.x}, Abstract = {'Imagining Cihuacoatl' examines the conundrum of the multiple identities of the 'serpent woman', a Mexica goddess, analysing her relationship with other goddesses in the Nahua pantheon. She and the others were marked in a particular sexualised and gendered manner in the Nahua world. This article argues that Cihuacoatl and the fertility goddesses cannot be conceptualised in a symbolic universe that has binary divisions between male and female, nor can they be analysed by the methods currently employed in the social and cultural history of sexuality. This article follows images of various goddesses of warfare and fertility from pre-conquest and early post-conquest texts, suggesting ways in which the Spanish attempted to reconceptualise all of them into a framework of demonic sin. 'Imagining Cihuacoatl' will interrogate the sexual performance involved in Nahua ritual, lost in the translation not just from Nahuatl to Spanish but from a system that linked sex with rites of fertility to one that linked sex with sin. 'Imagining Cihuacoatl' shows that Gayle Rubin's call to develop a theory of sexuality separate from gender is a project fraught with contradictions, and one that remains incomplete. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.}, Doi = {10.1111/j.1468-0424.2010.01610.x}, Key = {fds376385} } @article{fds295683, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Neil L. Whitehead (1956–2012)}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {59}, Number = {3}, Pages = {631-633}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2012}, Month = {July}, ISSN = {0014-1801}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000307418800008&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00141801-1708579}, Key = {fds295683} } @article{fds324370, Author = {Sigal, P and Restall, M and Wood, S and Pizzigoni, C}, Title = {James Lockhart (1933–2014)}, Journal = {Hispanic American Historical Review}, Volume = {95}, Number = {2}, Pages = {335-339}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2874647}, Doi = {10.1215/00182168-2874647}, Key = {fds324370} } @article{fds324369, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {In this issue}, Journal = {HAHR - Hispanic American Historical Review}, Volume = {96}, Number = {3}, Pages = {415-419}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2016}, Month = {August}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-3601526}, Doi = {10.1215/00182168-3601526}, Key = {fds324369} } @article{fds366902, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Making maya men fantasy, voyeurism, and perverted penetration}, Journal = {GLQ}, Volume = {26}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-34}, Year = {2020}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-7929083}, Doi = {10.1215/10642684-7929083}, Key = {fds366902} } %% Book Chapters @misc{fds295665, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Gendered Power, the Hybrid Self, and Homosexual Desire in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Yucatan}, Booktitle = {Infamous Desire: Male Homosexuality in Colonial Latin America}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Editor = {Sigal, P}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds295665} } @misc{fds295666, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {(Homo)Sexual Desire and Masculine Power in Colonial Latin America: Notes Toward an Integrated Analysis}, Booktitle = {Infamous Desire: Male Homosexuality in Colonial Latin America}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Editor = {Sigal, P}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds295666} } @misc{fds295667, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Sexuality in Maya and Nahuatl Sources}, Booktitle = {Sources And Methods for the Study of Postconquest Mesoamerican Ethnohistory}, Editor = {Lockhart, J and Sousa, L and Wood, S}, Year = {2007}, Key = {fds295667} } @misc{fds295668, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {The Perfumed Man: Sacrifice, Penetration, and the Feminization of the Male Body in Sixteenth-Century Mesoamerica}, Pages = {299-316}, Booktitle = {Power, Gender, and Ritual in Europe and the Americas: Essays in Memory of Richard C. Trexler}, Publisher = {Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, University of Toronto}, Editor = {Arnade, P and Rocke, M}, Year = {2008}, ISBN = {9780772720474}, Key = {fds295668} } @misc{fds295669, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Colonial Reflections/Magical Imaginations: Pedro Lasch’s Tezcatlipoca}, Booktitle = {Black Mirror/Espejo Negro}, Editor = {Lasch, P}, Year = {2010}, Key = {fds295669} } @misc{fds324371, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Imagining Cihuacoatl: Masculine Rituals, Nahua Goddesses and the Texts of the Tlacuilos}, Pages = {12-37}, Booktitle = {Historicising Gender and Sexuality}, Publisher = {BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD}, Year = {2011}, Month = {September}, ISBN = {9781444339444}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444343953.ch1}, Doi = {10.1002/9781444343953.ch1}, Key = {fds324371} } @misc{fds295670, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Sodomy}, Booktitle = {Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque: Transatlantic Exchange and Transformation}, Publisher = {University of Texas Press}, Year = {2013}, Key = {fds295670} } @misc{fds366904, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Unnatural Sex? Epilogue}, Pages = {213-224}, Booktitle = {SEXUALITY AND THE UNNATURAL IN COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA}, Year = {2016}, ISBN = {978-0-520-28815-7}, Key = {fds366904} } @misc{fds366903, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Queer Náhuatl: Sahagún’s Faggots and Sodomites, Lesbians and Hermaphrodites}, Pages = {321-346}, Booktitle = {Indigenous Religions}, Year = {2017}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9780754629603}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315252407-25}, Abstract = {This article provides a method for interpreting the place of sexuality in texts that defy analysis. The author uses one source, the Florentine Codex, a large and com plex bilingual Nahuatl and Spanish document, to decipher some elements about cross-dressing individuals, hom osexualities, and gender inversions in N ahua society at the time of the Spanish conquest. The m ethodology used combines close narrative analysis with intellectual genealogy. The author argues that decoding the texts in this w ay allows us to uncover a cross-dressing male who engaged in " pas- sive” hom osexual acts and had a degraded but institutionalized role to play.}, Doi = {10.4324/9781315252407-25}, Key = {fds366903} } @misc{fds371534, Author = {Sigal, P}, Title = {Franciscan Voyeurism in Sixteenth---Century New Spain}, Pages = {139-168}, Booktitle = {ETHNOPORNOGRAPHY}, Year = {2020}, ISBN = {978-1-4780-0384-7}, Key = {fds371534} } @misc{fds371535, Author = {Sigal, P and Tortorici, Z and Whitehead, NL}, Title = {Ethnopornography as Methodology and Critique Merging the Ethno--, the Porno--, and the --Graphos INTRODUCTION |}, Pages = {1-37}, Booktitle = {ETHNOPORNOGRAPHY}, Year = {2020}, ISBN = {978-1-4780-0384-7}, Key = {fds371535} } %% Book Reviews @article{fds50696, Author = {P. Sigal}, Title = {The Emperor's Mirror: Understanding Cultures through Primary Sources. by Russell J. Barber and Frances F. Berdan (Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1998)}, Journal = {Ethnohistory}, Volume = {48}, Number = {4}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds50696} } @article{fds50697, Author = {P. Sigal}, Title = {Christianity and Sexuality in the Early Modern World: Regulating Desire, Reforming Practice. by Merry E. Weisner-Hanks (New York: Routledge, 2000)}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {106}, Number = {3}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds50697} } @article{fds50695, Author = {P. Sigal}, Title = {Beyond Carnival: Male Homosexuality in Twentieth-Century Brazil. by James N. Green (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999)}, Journal = {Journal of Homosexuality}, Volume = {42}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds50695} } @article{fds50693, Title = {Gender and Sexuality in Latin America," special issue of Hispanic American Historical Review 81:3-4 (August-November 2001)}, Journal = {Estudios Interdisciplinarios de America Latina y el Caribe}, Volume = {14}, Number = {1}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds50693} } @article{fds50692, Title = {The Famous 41: Sexuality and Social Control in Mexico, c. 1901. by Robert McKee Irwin, Eward J. McCaughan, and Michaelle Rocio Nasser, eds. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003)}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {109}, Number = {4}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds50692} } | |
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