
Democracy in Latin America
Looking Back Thinking AheadFall 2002
Gender, Sexuality and Democracy
Bradley Epps
The post-dictatorial cultural transformations of Chile, Argentina, and Uruguay
bring to the fore gender and sexuality as critical to discussion and reflection
on the development of democracy. Family codes, abortion, divorce, adoption,
inheritance laws, the role of the Church, sexual rights are all at stake.
Awareness about issues of social tolerance and pluralism regarding women
and sexual minorities in these societies is increasing, as reflected in
recent studies on public opinion. Without dismissing the many problems and
prejudices that are still standing, the apparent change in public opinion
bears in important ways on the prospects for more truly participatory democratic
cultures.
To facilitate such a discussion, Harvard Professors Bradley Epps and LuÃs
E. Cárcamo-Huechante, with Raquel Olea and others from the Universidad
de Santiago, are organizing a conference/workshop to take place in Santiago
de Chile, from August 20-22, 2003. The event will bring together scholars,
critics, writers, and performance artists from both the United States and
Latin America (primarily Chile, but also Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, and
Peru) who work on issues of gender and sexuality in the fields of literature,
visual arts, and cultural critique.
"We aim at once to deepen and to expand the ongoing dialogue on the
North/South locations of theoretical and critical discourses," Epps
said. "There are arguably few areas of inquiry as morally, politically,
and culturally charged as that of gender and sexuality. Taboos, prejudices,
and biases obtain in insistent yet variegated ways in both the North and
the South. That said, the study of gender and sexuality tends to be informed
by academic trends from metropolitan centers of power and knowledge, a phenomenon
that doubtless merits examination." For Cárcamo-Huechante, "contemporary
literary and cultural production of the region constitutes a fascinating
discursive arena in which new cultures of gender and sexuality are registered
and imagined."
Among the participants will be Sylvia Molloy, Raquel Olea, Diamela Eltit,
Pedro Lemebel, Carmen Berenguer, Francine Masiello, Daniel Balderston, Diana
Sorensen, Jean Franco, Nelly Richard, Olga Grau, Licia Fiol Matta, and Guadalupe
Santa Cruz.
Bradley Epps is a professor in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. For further information, contact Marcela RenterÃa by e-mail at renteria@fas.harvard.edu.