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Elizabeth Dore
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Elizabeth Dore (1946-2022) was a professor of Latin American Studies, specialising in class, race, gender and ethnicity, with a focus on modern history. She was professor emerita of Modern Languages and Linguistics at the University of Southampton, and had a PhD from Columbia University.[1]
She was Project Director of the Oral History Project 'Memories of the Cuban Revolution'[2] and wrote extensively on Cuban history and politics.[1]
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Selected publications
- The Peruvian Mining Industry: Growth, Stagnation, And Crisis (Westview, 1988; Routledge, 2019)[3]
- Gender Politics in Latin America: Debates in Theory and Practice (Edited, Monthly Review Press, 1997)[4]
- Hidden Histories of Gender and the State in Latin America (Edited with Maxine Molyneux, Duke University Press, 2000)[5]
- Myths of modernity: Peonage and Patriarchy in Nicaragua (Duke University Press, 2006)[6]
- Cuban Lives: What Difference Did a Revolution Make? (Verso, 2017)
- How Things Fall Apart: What Happened to the Cuban Revolution (Apollo, 2022)
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References
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