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Knowledge transgressors: the incursion of women to science in Mexico, 19th-20th centuries
Author(s) -
Elva Rivera Gómez
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
culture and history digital journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.103
H-Index - 5
ISSN - 2253-797X
DOI - 10.3989/chdj.2019.004
Subject(s) - invisibility , historiography , discipline , panorama , power (physics) , period (music) , feminization (sociology) , gender studies , history , anachronism , field (mathematics) , late 19th century , women's history , politics , sociology , political science , social science , aesthetics , art , law , archaeology , visual arts , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics , optics
The influence of feminist thought has been very important in the field of history, as it has revealed the invisibility of women in this disciplinary field, besides of studying power relations and their effects on the daily, private and public life in which both women and men are involved. Access to education, first primary, then secondary and later higher in Mexico, spanned for a period of more than a century. In some of the regions, the presence of women in higher education was in the last third of the nineteenth century in areas considered feminine, such as midwifery, nursing and others. Careers are recorded in the 20th century. In this paper we propose to review the historiography and history of women who entered the different fields of knowledge at the end of the 19th century and in the first half of the 20th century, as well as to present a panorama of the educational spaces to which the Mexican women had access.

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