Middle Classes in Latin America

Middle Classes in Latin America

Subjectivities, Practices, and Genealogies

Lopez-Pedreros, A. Ricardo; Stern, Claudia; Barbosa Cruz, Mario

Taylor & Francis Ltd

05/2024

504

Mole

9781032285139

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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Foreword, 1. Introduction: "For the First Time Ever", Part I: Liberalism, the Idea of Race, and Neoliberalism, Introduction to Part I, 2. "Sao Paulo is Modernity": Middle-Class Identity and Narratives of Exceptionalism in Brazil, 3. Uneven Development and the Concept of the Middle Class: Costa Rica, 1890-1950, 4. The Ordeal of Decency: A Perspective on Mexico City's Urban Space and Middle Classes (1952-1966), 5. Gender, Race, and the Evolution of Middle-class Identity in the Mexico City Press, 1820-1900, 6. Escaping the Carimbas: An Intersectional Analysis of "Black" Middle-Class Trajectories in Colombia, Part II: Labor, Consumption, and Political Disparities, Introduction to Part II, 7. Sales Knowledge, Labor Mobility, and Working-Class Identity: Store Clerks (Argentina, 1900-1940), 8. The Cost of Love: Middle Classes, Consumption, and Sentimentalism in Mexico (1880-1920), 9. Tango, Morality, and Nostalgia in the Making of a Middle-Class Subjectivity in Argentina, 10. Public-Sector Employment, the Middle Classes, and Social Position in Mexico City in the Early 1900s, 11. "Cheerful, Attentive, and Polite": Store Clerks and the Middle Class in Early-Twentieth-Century Mexico City, Part III: The State, Social Movements, and the Cold War, Introduction to Part III, 12. The Middle Classes and Anti-Communism During the Cardenas Presidency in Mexico: Nationalist Dynamics in a Transnational Framework, 13. "Tigers, Cholo-Jacobins, and Red Government Officials": Roles and Discourses of the Radical Middle Class in Ecuador Between 1895 and 1938, 14. Towards a New Cultural Sociology of the Latin American Middle Class: Ecuador's Middle-Class Revolution as a Collective Representation, 15. Silences, Confessions, and Taboos: Petit Bourgeoise's Dissident Memories of Political Radicalization in Bogota, 16. "Young People Committed to the Motherland": Middle Class Masculinity, Radicalization, and the Fragmentation of the "Integral Chileans" in the 1970s, Part IV: Social Mobility, Neoliberal Discourses, and the "Pink Tide", Introduction to Part IV, 17. A "Middle-Class Country": Social Mobility, Progress, and Genealogical Origins in the Public Discourse in Argentina (2002-2015), 18. Middle-Class Sensorial: Conceptualizing the Experience of Inhabiting "the Middle" in Brazil's Post-Neoliberal Public Housing, 19. Residential Practices of Three Generations of a Middle-Class Family: Mortgages, Honor, and Inequalities in Mexico City, 20. Class Transvestism in Chile: When the Poor Became Middle Class, 21. Taxonomy, Identity, Mode of Being, or Political Project?: Epistemologies of "Middle Class" in Latin America Since 1948, 22. From White-Collar Employment to Managerial Influence Among the Middle Class in Early-Twenty-First Century Mexico City, 23. Equality or Hierarchy? Solidarity with Those Above or Below?: Dilemmas of Gendered Self- Identification in a New Bolivian Middle Class Miriam Shakow Epilogue: "Was It Worth Coming?": The Global Drama of Middle-Class Lives in Latin America
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Young Man;Mexico City;Latin American Middle Classes;Follow;Public Administration;Middle Class Identity;Military Junta;Census;Upward Social Mobility;Middle Class Country;Vice Versa;Store Clerks;Costa Rica's Middle Classes;La Prensa;Middle Class Sensibilities;Tango Lyrics;Public Sector Employees;Mexican Middle Classes;El Imparcial;Middle Income Sectors;Argentina's Middle Class;Tepito;Working Class Identity;Middle Class Subjectivities;Urban Middle Sectors