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WOMEN’S WAR: GENDER ACTIVISM IN THE VIETNAM WAR AND IN THE WARS FOR KURDISH AUTONOMY1 1 The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful comments and efforts towards improving our manuscript. The authors are also thankful to David Rodgers and Veridiana Domingos Cordeiro for the translation and revision of this text.

A GUERRA DAS MULHERES: ATIVISMOS DE GÊNERO NA GUERRA DO VIETNÃ E NAS GUERRAS PELA AUTONOMIA DO CURDISTÃO

Abstract

This paper debates women’s activism in two events: the Vietnam War (1954-1975) and the historical Kurdish struggle for autonomy (known as “Kurdish question”). We hypothesize that the reorganization of gender roles during the conflicts marks the meanings of wars and configures what we call a woman for the times of war, that is, a woman who transits across the spaces of public confrontation, armed conflict and domesticity. The approach outlined here is structured into three parts: the first and the second ones present aspects of both conflicts by pointing to possible convergences and differences between them; we also present the variety of networks of participation and activism of women in both cases. In the third and final part, we discuss the interfaces among the production of gender, war, and ideas, crossing a manifold of narratives, experiences, and stories that reveal different dimensions of wars and nations, and the diversity of the regimes of ideas that attached to them.

Keywords
Gender; war; nation and nationalism; post-colonial feminism

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