1.
Butler, J.: Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity. Routledge, New York (2006).
2.
Butler, J.: Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity. Routledge, New York (2006).
3.
D’Emilio, J., Freedman, E.B.: Intimate matters: a history of sexuality in America. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1997).
4.
Escott, P.D.: Major problems in the history of the American South: documents and essays, Vol.1: The Old South. Houghton Mifflin, Boston (1999).
5.
Fink, L.: Major problems in the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era: documents  and essays. D.C. Heath, Lexington, Mass (1993).
6.
Foucault, M.: The history of sexuality. Vintage Books, New York (1990).
7.
Foucault, M.: The history of sexuality. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1990).
8.
Rutherford, J.: Identity: community, culture, difference. Lawrence & Wishart, London (1990).
9.
Laqueur, T.: Orgasm, Generation, and the Politics of Reproductive Biology. Representations. 1–41 (1986). https://doi.org/10.2307/2928434.
10.
Gallagher, C., Laqueur, T.W.: The making of the modern body: sexuality and society in the  nineteenth century. University of California Press, Berkeley (1987).
11.
Laqueur, T.W.: Making sex: body and gender from the Greeks to Freud. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1990).
12.
Levine, R.M., Crocitti, J.J.: The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Latin America Bureau, London (1999).
13.
Levine, R.M., Crocitti, J.J.: The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press, Durham, NC (1999).
14.
Mintz, S., Kellogg, S.: Domestic revolutions: a social history of American family life. Free Press, New York (1988).
15.
Peiss, K.L.: Major problems in the history of American sexuality: documents and  essays. Houghton Mifflin, Boston (2002).
16.
Scott, J.W.: Gender and the politics of history. Columbia University Press, New York.
17.
Scott, J.W.: Gender and the politics of history. Columbia University Press, New York (1999).
18.
Tindall, G.B., Shi, D.E.: America: a narrative history. W.W. Norton & Co, New York (2010).
19.
Barker-Benfield, B.: The Spermatic Economy: A Nineteenth Century View of Sexuality. Feminist Studies. 1, (1972). https://doi.org/10.2307/3180106.
20.
Gordon, M.: The American family in social-historical perspective. St. Martin’s Press, New York (1978).
21.
Barker-Benfield, G.J.: The horrors of the half-known life: male attitudes toward women and sexuality in nineteenth-century America /G.J. Barker-Benfield. Harper & Row, New York (1976).
22.
Counihan, C., Van Esterik, P.: Food and culture: a reader. Routledge, New York (2013).
23.
Nancy F. Cott: Passionlessness: An Interpretation of Victorian Sexual Ideology, 1790-1850. Signs. 4, 219–236 (1978).
24.
Degler, C.N.: What Ought To Be and What Was: Women’s Sexuality in the Nineteenth Century. The American Historical Review. 79, (1974). https://doi.org/10.2307/1851777.
25.
Gordon, M.: The American family in social-historical perspective. St. Martin’s Press, New York (1978).
26.
Freedman, E.B.: Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America: Behavior, Ideology, and Politics. Reviews in American History. 10, (1982). https://doi.org/10.2307/2701827.
27.
Gordon, M.: The Ideal Husband as Depicted in the Nineteenth Century Marriage Manual. The Family Coordinator. 18, (1969). https://doi.org/10.2307/581982.
28.
Peiss, K.L.: Major problems in the history of American sexuality: documents and  essays. Houghton Mifflin, Boston (2002).
29.
Noyes, J.H.: Male continence : or, self-control in sexual intercourse. A letter of inquiry answered. (1866).
30.
Fraser, W.J., Saunders, R.F., Wakelyn, J.L.: The web of Southern social relations: women, family, & education. University of Georgia Press, Athens, Ga (1985).
31.
Smith-Rosenberg, C.: Disorderly conduct: visions of gender in Victorian America. Oxford University Press, New York (1986).
32.
Rosenberg, C.E.: Sexuality, Class and Role in 19th-Century America. American Quarterly. 25, (1973). https://doi.org/10.2307/2711594.
33.
Shade, W.: ‘A Mental Passion’: Female Sexuality in Victorian America. International Journal of Women’s Studies. 1, 158–165 (1978).
34.
Vester, K.: Regime Change: Gender, Class, and the Invention of Dieting in Post-Bellum America. Journal of Social History. 44, 39–70 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2010.0032.
35.
Walters, R.G.: Primers for prudery: sexual advice to Victorian America. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2000).
36.
Welter, B.: The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860. American Quarterly. 18, (1966). https://doi.org/10.2307/2711179.
37.
Gordon, M.: The American family in social-historical perspective. St. Martin’s Press, New York (1978).
38.
Brodie, J.F.: Contraception and abortion in nineteenth-century America. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (1994).
39.
Brooks, C.F.: The Early History of the Anti-Contraceptive Laws in Massachusetts and Connecticut. American Quarterly. 18, (1966). https://doi.org/10.2307/2711107.
40.
Dayton, C.H.: Taking the Trade: Abortion and Gender Relations in an Eighteenth-Century New England Village. The William and Mary Quarterly. 48, (1991). https://doi.org/10.2307/2937996.
41.
Fraser, G.J.: African American midwifery in the South: dialogues of birth, race  and memory. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1998).
42.
Golden, J.: A Social History of Wet Nursing in America: From Breast to Bottle. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
43.
Golden, J.: A social history of wet nursing in America: from breast to bottle. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
44.
Gordon, L.: Woman’s body, woman’s right: birth control in America. Penguin, New York (1990).
45.
Hoffert, S.D.: Private matters: American attitudes toward childbearing and infant  nurture in the urban North, 1800-1860. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (1988).
46.
Lewis, J., Lockridge, K.A.: ‘Sally Has Been Sick’: Pregnancy and Family Limitation among Virginia Gentry Women, 1780-1830. Journal of Social History. 22, 5–19 (1988).
47.
Logue, B.J.: The Case for Birth Control before 1850: Nantucket Reexamined. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 15, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/204137.
48.
McLaren, A.: A history of contraception: from antiquity to the present day. Blackwell, Oxford (1990).
49.
Mohr, J.C.: Abortion in America: the origins and evolution of national policy, 1800-1900. Oxford University Press, New York (1978).
50.
Noyes, J.H.: Male continence : or, self-control in sexual intercourse. A letter of inquiry answered, http://library.syr.edu/digital/collections/m/MaleContinence-15k/, (1866).
51.
Reed, J.: The birth control movement and American society: from private vice  to public virtue : with a new preface on the relationship between  historical scholarship and feminist issues. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1983).
52.
Riddle, J.M.: Eve’s herbs: a history of contraception and abortion in the West. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1997).
53.
Daniel Scott Smith: Family Limitation, Sexual Control, and Domestic Feminism in Victorian America. Feminist Studies. 1, 40–57 (1973).
54.
Hartman, M.S., Banner, L.W.: Clio’s consciousness raised: new perspectives on the history of  women. Harper and Row, New York (1974).
55.
Wertz, R.W.: Lying-in: a history of childbirth in America. Yale University Press, New Haven (1989).
56.
Aliyyah I. Abdur-Rahman: ‘The Strangest Freaks of Despotism’: Queer Sexuality in Antebellum African American Slave Narratives. African American Review. 40, 223–237 (2006).
57.
Bardaglio, P.W.: Rape and the Law in the Old South: ‘Calculated to excite Indignation in every heart’. The Journal of Southern History. 60, (1994). https://doi.org/10.2307/2211066.
58.
Hodes, M.E.: Sex, love, race: crossing boundaries in North American history. New York University Press, New York (1999).
59.
Brown, K.M.: Good wives, nasty wenches, and anxious patriarchs: gender, race, and power in colonial Virginia. Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History  and Culture by the University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1996).
60.
Brundage, W.F.: Under sentence of death: lynching in the South. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1997).
61.
Burnham, M.: An Impossible Marriage: Slave Law and Family Law. Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice. 5, 187–226 (1988).
62.
Bynum, V.E.: Unruly women: the politics of social and sexual control in the old South. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1992).
63.
Camp, S.M.H.: The Pleasures of Resistance: Enslaved Women and Body Politics in the Plantation South, 1830-1861. The Journal of Southern History. 68, (2002). https://doi.org/10.2307/3070158.
64.
Cardyn, L.: Sexualized Racism/Gendered Violence: Outraging the Body Politic in the Reconstruction South. Michigan Law Review. 100, (2002). https://doi.org/10.2307/1290425.
65.
Bleser, C.K.R.: In joy and in sorrow: women, family, and marriage in the Victorian  South, 1830-1900. Oxford University Press, New York (1991).
66.
Fraser, W.J., Saunders, R.F., Wakelyn, J.L.: The web of Southern social relations: women, family, & education. University of Georgia Press, Athens, Ga (1985).
67.
Clinton, C.: The plantation mistress: woman’s world in the old South. Pantheon Books, New York (1982).
68.
Dailey, J.E., Gilmore, G.E., Simon, B.: Jumpin’ Jim Crow: southern politics from Civil War to civil rights. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (2000).
69.
Dorr, L.L.: Black-on-White Rape and Retribution in Twentieth-Century Virginia: ‘Men, Even Negroes, Must Have Some Protection’. The Journal of Southern History. 66, (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/2588009.
70.
Downey, D.B., Hyser, R.M.: No crooked death: Coatesville, Pennsylvania, and the lynching of Zachariah Walker. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (1991).
71.
Du Bois, W.E.B.: The Negro American family. Negro Universities Press, New York (1969).
72.
Hodes, M.E.: Sex, love, race: crossing boundaries in North American history. New York University Press, New York (1999).
73.
Dusinberre, W.: Them dark days: slavery in the American rice swamps. University of Georgia Press, Athens (2000).
74.
Dusinberre, W.: Them dark days: slavery in the American rice swamps. Oxford University Press, New York (1996).
75.
Foster, T.: The Sexual Abuse of Black Men under American Slavery. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 20, 445–464 (2011).
76.
Fox-Genovese, E.: Within the plantation household: black and white women of the Old South. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, (N.C.) (1988).
77.
Fraser, R.J.: Courtship and love among the enslaved in North Carolina. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson (2007).
78.
Frazier, E.F.: The Negro family in the United States. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind (2001).
79.
Garfield, D.M., Zafar, R. eds: Harriet Jacobs and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: New Critical Essays. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
80.
Zafar, R., Garfield, D.M.: Harriet Jacobs and ‘Incidents in the life of a slave girl’: new critical essays. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
81.
Gilmore, G.E.: Gender and Jim Crow: women and the politics of white supremacy in  North Carolina, 1896-1920. University of North CarolinaPress, Chapel Hill (1996).
82.
Dailey, J.E., Gilmore, G.E., Simon, B.: Jumpin’ Jim Crow: southern politics from Civil War to civil rights. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (2000).
83.
Griffin, R.J.: ‘Goin’ back over there to see that girl’: Competing social spaces in the lives of the enslaved in Antebellum North Carolina. Slavery & Abolition. 25, 94–113 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039042000220946.
84.
David, P.A.: Reckoning with slavery: a critical study in the quantitative history of American Negro slavery. Oxford University Press, New York (1976).
85.
Gutman, H.G.: The Black family in slavery and freedom, 1750-1925. Pantheon Books, New York (1976).
86.
Gutman, H.G.: The black family in slavery and freedom, 1750-1925. Blackwell, Oxford (1976).
87.
Hartman, S.V.: Scenes of subjection: terror, slavery, and self-making in  nineteenth-century America. Oxford University Press, New York (1997).
88.
Hodes, M.E.: Sex, love, race: crossing boundaries in North American history. New York University Press, New York (1999).
89.
Hodes, M.E.: White women, black men: illicit sex in the nineteenth-century South. Yale University Press, New Haven (1997).
90.
Jackson, K.T.: The Ku Klux Klan in the city, 1915-1930. I.R. Dee, Chicago (1992).
91.
Jackson, K.T.: Ku Klux Klan in the city 1915-1930. (1967).
92.
Jacobs, H.A.: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: Written by Herself. Trajectory, Inc, Marblehead (2014).
93.
Jacobs, H.A.: Incidents in the life of a slave girl. Dover Publications, Mineola, N.Y. (2001).
94.
Jacobs, H.A., Child, L.M., Yellin, J.F., Jacobs, J.S.: Incidents in the life of a slave girl: written by herself. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2000).
95.
Jacobs, H.A.: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: Written by Herself. Trajectory, Inc, Marblehead (2014).
96.
Jennings, T.: ‘Us Colored Women Had to Go Though A Plenty’: Sexual Exploitation of African-American Slave Women. Journal of Women’s History. 1, 45–74 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2010.0050.
97.
Jones, J.: Labor of love, labor of sorrow: Black women, work, and the family from slavery to the present. Basic Books, New York.
98.
Jones, J.: Labor of love, labor of sorrow: black women, work, and the family  from slavery to the present. Vintage Books, New York (1995).
99.
Jones, J.: Labor of love, labor of sorrow: black women, work, and the family  from slavery to the present. Basic Books, New York (1985).
100.
Jordan, W.D.: White over black: American attitudes toward the Negro, 1550-1812. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2012).
101.
Dailey, J.E., Gilmore, G.E., Simon, B.: Jumpin’ Jim Crow: southern politics from Civil War to civil rights. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (2000).
102.
Gordon, M.: The American family in social-historical perspective. St. Martin’s Press, New York (1978).
103.
Levine, L.W.: Black culture and black consciousness: Afro-American folk thought  from slavery to freedom. Oxford University Press, New York (1977).
104.
Lockley, T.J.: Crossing the race divide: Interracial sex in antebellum savannah. Slavery & Abolition. 18, 159–173 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1080/01440399708575217.
105.
Malone, A.P.: Sweet chariot: slave family and household structure in  nineteenth-century Louisiana. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1992).
106.
McCurry, S.: Masters of small worlds: yeoman households, gender relations, and  the political culture of the antebellum South Carolina Low Country. Oxford University Press, New York (1995).
107.
McGovern, J.R.: Anatomy of a lynching: the killing of Claude Neal. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, La (1992).
108.
McGovern, J.R.: Anatomy of a lynching: the killing of Claude Neal. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, La (1982).
109.
McLaurin, M.A.: Celia, a slave. University of Georgia Press, Athens (1991).
110.
McMillen, S.G.: Southern women: black and white in the Old South. Harlan Davidson, Arlington Heights, Ill (1992).
111.
McPherson, T.: Reconstructing Dixie: race, gender, and nostalgia in the imagined South. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (2003).
112.
Morgan, J.L.: ‘Some Could Suckle over Their Shoulder’: Male Travelers, Female Bodies, and the Gendering of Racial Ideology, 1500-1770. The William and Mary Quarterly. 54, (1997). https://doi.org/10.2307/2953316.
113.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People: Thirty  years of lynching in the United States, 1889-1918. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, New York (1967).
114.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People: Thirty years of lynching in the United States, 1889-1918. , New York (1919).
115.
Hodes, M.E.: Sex, love, race: crossing boundaries in North American history. New York University Press, New York (1999).
116.
Berlin, I., Hoffman, R.: Slavery and freedom in the age of the American Revolution. University Press of Virginia for the United States  Capitol Historical Society, Charlottesville (1983).
117.
Pease, J.H., Pease, W.H.: Ladies, women, and wenches: choice & constraint in antebellum  Charleston & Boston. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1990).
118.
Richardson, H.C.: The death of Reconstruction: race, labor, and politics in the  post-Civil War North, 1865-1901. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2001).
119.
Hodes, M.E.: Sex, love, race: crossing boundaries in North American history. New York University Press, New York (1999).
120.
Saks, E.: Representing Miscegenation Law. Raritan. 8, 39–69 (1988).
121.
Sollors, W.: Interracialism: black-white intermarriage in American history,  literature and law. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
122.
Scott, A.F.: The Southern lady: from pedestal to politics, 1830-1930. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va (1995).
123.
Shapiro, H.: White violence and black response: from reconstruction to Montgomery. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst (1988).
124.
Smead, H.: Blood justice: the lynching of Mack Charles Parker. Oxford University Press, New York (1988).
125.
Sommerville, D.M.: The Rape Myth in the Old South Reconsidered. The Journal of Southern History. 61, (1995). https://doi.org/10.2307/2211870.
126.
Bleser, C.K.R.: In joy and in sorrow: women, family, and marriage in the Victorian  South, 1830-1900. Oxford University Press, New York (1991).
127.
Stevenson, B.: Life in black and white: family and community in the slave South. Oxford University Press, New York (1996).
128.
Walters, R.G.: The Erotic South: Civilization and Sexuality in American Abolitionism. American Quarterly. 25, (1973). https://doi.org/10.2307/2711596.
129.
Wells-Barnett, I.B.: On lynchings: Southern horrors, A red record, Mob rule in New Orleans. Ayer Co, Salem, N.H. (1991).
130.
West, E.: Chains of love: slave couples in antebellum South Carolina. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (2004).
131.
West, E.: Masters and marriages, profits and paternalism: Slave owners’ perspectives on cross‐plantation unions in antebellum South Carolina. Slavery & Abolition. 21, 56–72 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1080/01440390008575295.
132.
West, E.: Surviving Separation: Cross-Plantation Marriages and the Slave Trade in Antebellum South Carolina. Journal of Family History. 24, 212–231 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1177/036319909902400205.
133.
Emily West: The Debate on the Strength of Slave Families: South Carolina and the Importance of Cross-Plantation Marriages. Journal of American Studies. 33, 221–241 (1999).
134.
White, D.G.: Ar’n’t I a woman?: female slaves in the plantation South. Norton, New York (1985).
135.
White, W.: Rope & faggot: a biography of Judge Lynch. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind (2001).
136.
Young, J.R.: Domesticating slavery: the master class in Georgia and South  Carolina, 1607-1837. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1999).
137.
Burnard, T.G.: Mastery, tyranny, and desire: Thomas Thistlewood and his slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican world. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, N.C. (2004).
138.
Bush, B.: ‘Sable venus’, ‘she devil’ or ‘drudge’? British slavery and the ‘fabulous fiction’ of black women’s identities, c . 1650–1838. Women’s History Review. 9, 761–789 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1080/09612020000200262.
139.
Edwards, B.: The history, civil and commercial, of the British colonies in the West Indies. L. White, Dublin (1793).
140.
Edwards, B.: The history, civil and commercial of the British colonies in the  West Indies. Arno Press, New York (1972).
141.
Hall, D.: In miserable slavery: Thomas Thistlewood in Jamaica, 1750-86. University of the West Indies Press, Mona (1999).
142.
Long, E.: The history of Jamaica: reflections on its situation, settlements, inhabitants, climate, products, commerce, laws, and government. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal (2002).
143.
Long, E.: The History of Jamaica: Or, General Survey of the Antient and Modern State of that Island, with Reflections on its Situation, Settlements, Inhabitants, Climate, Products, Commerce, Laws, and Government, Volume 1. publisher not identified, Place of publication not identified (1774).
144.
Long, E.: The History of Jamaica: Or, General Survey of the Antient and Modern State of that Island, with Reflections on its Situation, Settlements, Inhabitants, Climate, Products, Commerce, Laws, and Government, Volume 2. publisher not identified, Place of publication not identified (1774).
145.
Long, E.: The History of Jamaica: Or, General Survey of the Antient and Modern State of that Island, with Reflections on its Situation, Settlements, Inhabitants, Climate, Products, Commerce, Laws, and Government, Volume 3. publisher not identified, Place of publication not identified (1774).
146.
Stedman, J.G.: Narrative of a five years expedition against the revolted Negroes of Surinam. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst (1972).
147.
Winters, L.Z.: The mulatta concubine: terror, intimacy, freedom, and desire in the Black transatlantic. The University of Georgia Press, Athens (2016).
148.
Young, R.: Colonial desire: hybridity in theory, culture and race. Routledge, London (1995).
149.
Alencar, J.M. de: Iracema: a novel. Oxford University Press, New York (2000).
150.
Azevedo, A.: The slum: a novel. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
151.
Azevedo, A.: The slum: a novel. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
152.
Bastide, R.: Dusky Venus, Black Apollo. Race & Class. 3, 10–18 (1961). https://doi.org/10.1177/030639686100300102.
153.
Bost, S.: Mulattas and mestizas: representing mixed identities in the  Americas, 1850-2000. University of Georgia Press, Athens (2003).
154.
Cadena, M. de la: Indigenous Mestizos: the politics of race and culture in Cuzco,  Peru, 1919-1991. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (2000).
155.
Freyre, G.: The masters and the slaves [Casa-Grande & Senzala]: a study in the  development of Brazilian civilization. Knopf, New York (1964).
156.
Alejandro de la Fuente: Myths of Racial Democracy: Cuba, 1900-1912. Latin American Research Review. 34, 39–73 (1999).
157.
GARCÍA, A., ABAO, J., JOSÉ, A.: ‘Vida y muerte de la Mulata’. Crónica ilustrada de la prostitución en la Cuba del XIX. Anuario de Estudios Americanos. 54, 135–157.
158.
Gómez de Avellaneda, G., Scott, N.M., Gómez de Avellaneda, G.: Sab ; and, Autobiography. University of Texas Press, Austin (1993).
159.
Gómez de Avellaneda, G., Davies, C.: Sab. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2001).
160.
Tracy L. Devine Guzmán: ‘Diacuí Killed Iracema’: Indigenism, Nationalism and the Struggle for Brazilianness. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 24, 92–122 (2005).
161.
Kutzinski, V.M.: Sugar’s secrets: race and the erotics of Cuban nationalism. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville (1993).
162.
Levine, R.M., Crocitti, J.J.: The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Latin America Bureau, London (1999).
163.
Levine, R.M., Crocitti, J.J.: The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press, Durham, NC (1999).
164.
Pérez-Torres, R.: Mestizaje: critical uses of race in Chicano culture. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2006).
165.
Sheriff, R.E.: Dreaming equality: color, race, and racism in urban Brazil. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, N.J. (2001).
166.
WILLIAMS, C.: Cuban Anti-slavery Narrative through Postcolonial Eyes: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda’s Sab. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 27, 155–175 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1470-9856.2008.00261.x.
167.
Moraga, C., Anzaldúa, G.: This bridge called my back: writings by radical women of color. Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, New York (1983).
168.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, and representation. Blackwell Pub, Maden, MA.
169.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, & representation. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, Mass (2003).
170.
Brading, D.A.: Mexican Phoenix: Our Lady of Guadalupe : image and tradition across  five centuries. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
171.
Candelaria, C.: La Malinche, Feminist Prototype. Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 5, (1980). https://doi.org/10.2307/3346027.
172.
Sánchez, R., Cruz, R.M.: Essays on la mujer. Chicano Studies Center Publications, University of California, Los Angeles (1977).
173.
Córdova, T.: Chicana voices: intersections of class, race, and gender. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1993).
174.
Corpi, L., Rodríguez-Nieto, C.: Palabras de mediodía =: Noon words. Arte Público Press, Houston, Tex (1980).
175.
Cypess, S.M.: La Malinche in Mexican literature: from history to myth. University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas (1991).
176.
Esquivel, L.: Malinche. Suma de letras, Madrid (2006).
177.
Castañeda Shular, A., Ybarra-Frausto, T., Sommers, J.: Literatura chicana: texto y contexto. Chicano literature; text and context. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. (1972).
178.
Gaspar de Alba, A.: Velvet barrios: popular culture & Chicana/o sexualities. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2003).
179.
Godayol, P.: Malintzin/La Malinche/Doña Marina: re-reading the myth of the treacherous translator. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies. 18, 61–76 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/14701847.2012.716645.
180.
Hall, L.B., Eckmann, T.: Mary, mother and warrior: the Virgin in Spain and the Americas. University of Texas Press, Austin (2004).
181.
Harrington, P.: Mother of Death, Mother of Rebirth: The Mexican Virgin of Guadalupe. Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 56, 25–50 (1988).
182.
Hellerman, M.K.: The Coatlicue-Malinche Conflict: A Mother and Son Identity Crisis in the Writings of Carlos Fuentes. Hispania. 57, (1974). https://doi.org/10.2307/339756.
183.
Herrera-Sobek, M.: Beyond stereotypes: the critical analysis of Chicana literature. Bilingual Press, Binghamton, N.Y. (1985).
184.
Herrera-Sobek, M., Viramontes, H.M.: Chicana creativity and criticism: new frontiers in American  literature. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1996).
185.
Kafka, P.: (Out)classed women: contemporary Chicana writers on inequitable  gendered power relations. Greenwood, Westport, Conn (2000).
186.
Lafaye, J., Keen, B.: Quetzalcóatl and Guadalupe: the formation of Mexican national  consciousness, 1531-1813. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1976).
187.
Lanyon, A.: Malinche’s conquest. Allen & Unwin, St. Leonards, N.S.W. (2000).
188.
Miller, B.K.: Women in Hispanic literature: icons and fallen idols. University of California Press, Berkeley (1983).
189.
Pérez-Torres, R.: Mestizaje: critical uses of race in Chicano culture. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2006).
190.
Keber, E.J., Schroeder, S., Hicks, F. eds: Chipping away on earth: studies in prehispanic and colonial Mexico in honor of Arthur J.O. Anderson and Charles E. Dibble. Labyrinthos, Lancaster, Calif (1994).
191.
Miller, B.K.: Women in Hispanic literature: icons and fallen idols. University of California Press, Berkeley (1983).
192.
Pratt, M.L.: ‘Yo Soy La Malinche’: Chicana Writers and the Poetics of Ethnonationalism. Callaloo. 16, (1993). https://doi.org/10.2307/2932214.
193.
Rodriguez, J.: Our Lady of Guadalupe: faith and empowerment among Mexican-American  women. University of Texas Press, Austin (1994).
194.
Rodríguez, A., Daydí-Tolson, S.: Five poets of Aztlán. Bilingual Press, Binghamton, N.Y. (1985).
195.
Tafolla, C.: To split a human: mitos, machos, y la mujer chicana. Mexican American Cultural Center, San Antonio, Tex (1985).
196.
Taylor, W.B.: The Virgin of Guadalupe in New Spain: An Inquiry into the Social History of Marian Devotion. American Ethnologist. 14, 9–33 (1987).
197.
Townsend, C.: Malintzin’s choices: an Indian woman in the conquest of Mexico. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (2006).
198.
Wolf, E.R.: The Virgin of Guadalupe: A Mexican National Symbol. The Journal of American Folklore. 71, (1958). https://doi.org/10.2307/537957.
199.
Cohen, C.B., Wilk, R., Stoeltje, B.: Beauty queens on the global stage: gender, contests, and power. Routledge, New York (1996).
200.
Urban, G., Sherzer, J.: Nation-states and Indians in Latin America. Hats Off Books, Tucson, Ariz (2001).
201.
Konefal, B.: Subverting Authenticity: Reinas Indigenas and the Guatemalan State, 1978. Hispanic American Historical Review. 89, 41–72 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2008-044.
202.
Zaida Lobato, M., Damilakou, M., Tornay, L.: Belleza femenina, estética e ideología. Las reinas del trabajo durante el peronismo. Anuario de Estudios Americanos. 61, 233–277 (2004). https://doi.org/10.3989/aeamer.2004.v61.i1.148.
203.
Lopez, R.A.: The India Bonita Contest of 1921 and the Ethnicization of Mexican National Culture. Hispanic American Historical Review. 82, 291–328 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-82-2-291.
204.
Cohen, C.B., Wilk, R., Stoeltje, B.: Beauty queens on the global stage: gender, contests, and power. Routledge, New York (1996).
205.
Ochoa, M.: Queen for a day: transformistas, beauty queens, and the performance of femininity in Venezuela. Duke University Press, Durham (2014).
206.
Reinados de belleza en Colombia, http://www.colarte.com/colarte/conspintores.asp?idartista=6584.
207.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, and representation. Blackwell Pub, Maden, MA.
208.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, & representation. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, Mass (2003).
209.
Schackt, J.: Mayahood Through Beauty: Indian Beauty Pageants in Guatemala. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 24, 269–287 (2005).
210.
Tossounian, C.: Beauty Contests and National Identity. Atti del V Congresso della Società Italiana delle Storiche: Nuove frontiere per la storia di genere. (2010).
211.
Wilk, R.R.: Beauty and the feast: Official and visceral nationalism in Belize. Ethnos. 58, 294–316 (1993).
212.
Cohen, C.B., Wilk, R., Stoeltje, B.: Beauty queens on the global stage: gender, contests, and power. Routledge, New York (1996).
213.
Arrom, S.M.: The women of Mexico City, 1790-1857. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1985).
214.
Arrom, S.M.: The women of Mexico City, 1790-1857. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1985).
215.
Borchart de moreno, C.: Words and wounds: gender relations, violence, and the state in late colonial and early Republican Ecuador. Colonial Latin American Review. 13, 129–144 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/1060916042000210855.
216.
Boyer, R.E.: Lives of the bigamists: marriage, family, and community in colonial  Mexico. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1995).
217.
Calvo, T.: Concubinato y mestizaje en el medio urbano: el caso de Guadalajara n el siglo XVII. Revista de Indias. 44,.
218.
Deere, C.D.: Liberalism and Married Women’s Property Rights in Nineteenth-Century Latin America. Hispanic American Historical Review. 85, 627–678 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-85-4-627.
219.
De la Cadena, M.: Las mujeres son más indias: Etnicidad y género en una comunidad de Cusco. Revista Andina. 9, 7–47 (1991).
220.
Larson, B., Harris, O., Tandeter, E.: Ethnicity, markets, and migration in the Andes: at the crossroads of history and anthropology. Duke University Press, Durham (1995).
221.
Diaz, A.J.: Female citizens, patriarchs, and the law in Venezuela, 1786-1904. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Neb (2004).
222.
Lauderdale Graham, S.: House and street: the domestic world of servants and masters in nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro. University of Texas Press, Austin (1992).
223.
Lauderdale Graham, S.: House and street: the domestic world of servants and masters in  nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1988).
224.
Hunefeldt, C.: Liberalism in the bedroom: quarreling spouses in nineteenth-century  Lima. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Penn (2000).
225.
Lavrín, A.: Latin American women: historical perspectives. Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn (1978).
226.
Lavrín, A.: Sexuality and marriage in colonial Latin America. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln (1989).
227.
Martiń, L.: Daughters of the conquistadores: women of the Viceroyalty of Peru. Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas (1989).
228.
Verena Martinez-Alier: Elopement and Seduction in Nineteenth-Century Cuba. Past & Present. 91–129 (1972).
229.
Stolcke, V.: Marriage, class, and colour in nineteenth-century Cuba: a study of  racial attitudes and sexual values in a slave society. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor (1989).
230.
Ortega Noriega, S.: De la santidad a la perversión: o de porqué no se cumplía la ley de  Dios en la sociedad novohispana. Grijalbo, México (1986).
231.
Gaspar, D.B., Hine, D.C.: More than chattel: black women and slavery in the Americas. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Ind (1996).
232.
Socolow, S.M.: The Women of Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2015).
233.
Lavrín, A.: Sexuality and marriage in colonial Latin America. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln (1989).
234.
Aliyyah I. Abdur-Rahman: ‘The Strangest Freaks of Despotism’: Queer Sexuality in Antebellum African American Slave Narratives. African American Review. 40, 223–237 (2006).
235.
The Black Scholar.
236.
Brod, H.: The Making of masculinities: the new men’s studies. Routledge, New York (1992).
237.
Carnes, M.C., Griffen, C.: Meanings for manhood: constructions of masculinity in Victorian  America. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1990).
238.
Carnes, M.C.: Secret ritual and manhood in Victorian America. Yale University Press, New Haven (1989).
239.
Clawson, M.A.: Constructing brotherhood: class, gender, and fraternalism. Princeton University Press, New Jersey (1989).
240.
Hill Collins, P.: Black feminist thought: knowledge, consciousness, and the politics  of empowerment. Routledge, New York (2000).
241.
Duneier, M.: Slim’s table: race, respectability and masculinity. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1992).
242.
Foster, T.: The Sexual Abuse of Black Men under American Slavery. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 20, 445–464 (2011).
243.
Frank, S.M.: ‘Rendering Aid and Comfort’: Images of Fatherhood in the Letters of Civil War Soldiers from Massachusetts and Michigan. Journal of Social History. 26, 5–31 (1992).
244.
Plath, L.J., Lussana, S.: Black and white masculinity in the American South: 1800-2000. Cambridge Scholars, Newcastle upon Tyne (2009).
245.
Garza Carvajal, F.: Butterflies will burn: prosecuting sodomites in early modern Spain and Mexico. University of Texas Press, Austin (2003).
246.
Gibbs, J.T.: Young, black, and male in America: an endangered species. Auburn House, Westport, Conn (1988).
247.
Gilmore, D.D.: Manhood in the making: cultural concepts of masculinity. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1990).
248.
Carnes, M.C., Griffen, C.: Meanings for manhood: constructions of masculinity in Victorian  America. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1990).
249.
Griswold, R.L.: Fatherhood in America: a history. BasicBooks, New York (1993).
250.
Gutmann, M.C.: The meanings of macho: being a man in Mexico City. University of California Press, Berkeley (1996).
251.
Gutmann, M.C.: Changing men and masculinities in Latin America. Duke University Press, Durham (2003).
252.
Nardi, P.M.: Men’s friendships. SAGE, Newbury Park (1992).
253.
Nardi, P.M.: Men’s friendships. Sage, Newbury Park, Ca (1992).
254.
hooks, bell: We real cool: black men and masculinity. Routledge, New York (2004).
255.
hooks, bell: Yearning: race, gender, and cultural politics. Turnaround, London (1991).
256.
Carnes, M.C., Griffen, C.: Meanings for manhood: constructions of masculinity in Victorian  America. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1990).
257.
Irwin, R.M.: Mexican masculinities. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2003).
258.
Kimmel, M.S.: Manhood in America: a cultural history. Free Press, New York (1996).
259.
Kochman, T.: Rappin’ and stylin’ out: communication in urban Black America. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (1972).
260.
Lancaster, R.N.: Life is hard: machismo, danger and the intimacy of power in  Nicaragua. Univ. of California P., Berkley, Calif (1994).
261.
Lancaster, R.N.: Life is hard: machismo, danger, and the intimacy of power in Nicaragua. University of California Press, Berkeley (1992).
262.
Lindman, J.M.: Acting the Manly Christian: White Evangelical Masculinity in Revolutionary Virginia. The William and Mary Quarterly. 57, (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/2674480.
263.
Majors, R., Billson, J.M.: Cool pose: the dilemmas of black manhood in America. Lexington Books, New York (1992).
264.
Mangan, J.A., Walvin, J.: Manliness and morality: middle-class masculinity in Britain and  America, 1800-1940. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1987).
265.
Duberman, M.B., Vicinus, M., Chauncey, G.: Hidden from history: reclaiming the gay and lesbian past. Penguin, London (1991).
266.
McWhiney, G.: Cracker culture: Celtic ways in the Old South. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa (1988).
267.
Mirandé, A.: Hombres y machos: masculinity and Latino culture. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1997).
268.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, and representation. Blackwell Pub, Maden, MA.
269.
Gutmann, M.C.: Perspectives on Las Américas: a reader in culture, history, & representation. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, Mass (2003).
270.
Patterson, O.: Rituals of blood: consequences of slavery in two American centuries. Civitas/CounterPoint, Washington, D.C. (1998).
271.
Paz, O.: The labyrinth of solitude: life and thought in Mexico. Allen Lane, London (1967).
272.
Ramos, S.: Profile of man and culture in Mexico. University of Texas Press, [Austin] (1969).
273.
Ramos, S.: Profile of man and culture in Mexico. University of Texas Press, [Austin] (1962).
274.
Roth, S.N.: ‘How a Slave was Made a Man’: Negotiating Black Violence and Masculinity in Antebellum Slave Narratives. Slavery & Abolition. 28, 255–275 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/01440390701428048.
275.
Mangan, J.A., Walvin, J.: Manliness and morality: middle-class masculinity in Britain and  America, 1800-1940. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1987).
276.
E. Anthony Rotundo: Romantic Friendship: Male Intimacy and Middle-Class Youth in the Northern United States, 1800-1900. Journal of Social History. 23, 1–25 (1989).
277.
Rotundo, E.A.: American manhood: transformations in masculinity from the Revolution to the modern era. BasicBooks, New York.
278.
Rotundo, E.A.: American manhood: transformations in masculinity from the Revolution to the modern era. BasicBooks, New York (1993).
279.
E. Anthony Rotundo: Body and Soul: Changing Ideals of American Middle-Class Manhood, 1770-1920. Journal of Social History. 16, 23–38 (1983).
280.
John Saillant: The Black Body Erotic and the Republican Body Politic, 1790-1820. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 5, 403–428 (1995).
281.
Simmons, M.E.: The Mexican corrido as a source for interpretive study of modern Mexico, 1870-1950. Kraus Reprint Co, New York (1969).
282.
Stern, S.J.: The secret history of gender: women, men, and power in late colonial Mexico. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, N.C. (1995).
283.
Stevens, D.F.: Based on a true story: Latin American history at the movies. SR Books, Wilmington, Del (1997).
284.
Vester, K.: Regime Change: Gender, Class, and the Invention of Dieting in Post-Bellum America. Journal of Social History. 44, 39–70 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2010.0032.
285.
Aliyyah I. Abdur-Rahman: ‘The Strangest Freaks of Despotism’: Queer Sexuality in Antebellum African American Slave Narratives. African American Review. 40, 223–237 (2006).
286.
Arenas, R.: Before night falls. Serpent’s Tail, London (2001).
287.
Arenas, R.: Before night falls. Viking, New York (1993).
288.
Arguelles, L., Rich, B.R.: Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Revolution: Notes toward an Understanding of the Cuban Lesbian and Gay Male Experience, Part I. Signs. 9, 683–699 (1984).
289.
Rich, R., Arguelles, L.: Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Revolution: Notes toward an Understanding of the Cuban Lesbian and Gay Male Experience, Part II. Signs. 11, 120–136 (1985).
290.
Bergmann, E.L., Smith, P.J.: Entiendes?: queer readings, Hispanic writings. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (1995).
291.
Bleys, R.: Images of ambiente: homotextuality and Latin American art, 1810-today. Continuum, London (2000).
292.
Balderston, D., Guy, D.J.: Sex and sexuality in Latin America. New York University Press, New York (1997).
293.
Carrier, J.: De los otros: intimacy and homosexuality among Mexican men. Columbia University Press, New York (1995).
294.
Carrillo, H.: The night is young: sexuality in Mexico in the time of AIDS. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2002).
295.
Castro, F., Kenner, M., Petras, J.F.: Fidel Castro speaks. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1972).
296.
Brod, H.: The Making of masculinities: the new men’s studies. Routledge, New York (1992).
297.
Brad Epps: Proper Conduct: Reinaldo Arenas, Fidel Castro, and the Politics of Homosexuality. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 6, 231–283 (1995).
298.
Garza Carvajal, F.: Butterflies will burn: prosecuting sodomites in early modern Spain and Mexico. University of Texas Press, Austin (2003).
299.
Green, J.N.: Beyond carnival: male homosexuality in twentieth-century Brazil. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Ill (1999).
300.
James N. Green: "Who Is the Macho Who Wants to Kill Me?” Male Homosexuality, Revolutionary Masculinity, and the Brazilian Armed Struggle of the 1960s and 1970s. Hispanic American Historical Review. 92, 437–469 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-1600288.
301.
Ortega Noriega, S.: De la santidad a la perversión: o de porqué no se cumplía la ley de  Dios en la sociedad novohispana. Grijalbo, México (1986).
302.
Guerra, L.: Gender policing, homosexuality and the new patriarchy of the Cuban Revolution, 1965–70. Social History. 35, 268–289 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2010.487378.
303.
Horswell, M.J.: Decolonizing the sodomite: queer tropes of sexuality in colonial Andean culture. University of Texas Press, Austin (2005).
304.
Irwin, R.M., McCaughan, E., Nasser, M.R.: The famous 41: sexuality and social control in Mexico, c. 1901. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, N.Y. (2003).
305.
Roger N. Lancaster: Comment on Arguelles and Rich’s ‘Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Revolution: Notes toward an Understanding of the Cuban Lesbian and Gay Male Experience, Part II’. Signs. 12, 188–192 (1986).
306.
Leiner, M.: Sexual politics in Cuba: machismo, homosexuality, and AIDS. Westview Press, Boulder (1994).
307.
Lumsden, I.: Machos, maricones, and gays: Cuba and homosexuality. Temple University Press, Philadelphia (1996).
308.
Enrico Mario Santí: ‘Fresa y Chocolate’: The Rhetoric of Cuban Reconciliation. MLN. 113, 407–425 (1998).
309.
Molloy, S., Irwin, R.M.: Hispanisms and homosexualities. Duke University Press, Durham, NC (1998).
310.
Murray, S.O.: Latin American male homosexualities. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1995).
311.
Ocasio, R.: Gays and the Cuban Revolution: The Case of Reinaldo Arenas. Latin American Perspectives. 29, 78–98 (2002).
312.
Alfred Padula: Review: Gender, Sexuality, and Revolution in Cuba. Latin American Research Review. 31, 226–235 (1996).
313.
Parker, R.G.: Bodies, pleasures, and passions: sexual cultures in contemporary Brazil. Beacon Press, Boston (1991).
314.
Parker, R.G.: Beneath the equator: cultures of desire, male homosexuality, and emerging gay communities in Brazil. Routledge, New York (1999).
315.
Melhuus, M., Stølen, K.A.: Machos, mistresses, madonnas: contesting the power of Latin American gender imagery. Verso, London (1996).
316.
Puig, M.: Kiss of the spider woman. Arena, London (1984).
317.
Puig, M.: Kiss of the spider woman. Knopf, New York (1979).
318.
Quinlan, S.C., Arenas, F.: Lusosex: gender and sexuality in the Portuguese-speaking world. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2002).
319.
Bergmann, E.L., Smith, P.J.: Entiendes?: queer readings, Hispanic writings. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (1995).
320.
Balderston, D., Guy, D.J.: Sex and sexuality in Latin America. New York University Press, New York (1997).
321.
Santiago, S.: Stella Manhattan. Duke University Press, Durham, NC (1994).
322.
Sigal, P.H.: Infamous desire: male homosexuality in colonial Latin America. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2003).
323.
Sigal, P.: The Cuiloni, the Patlache, and the Abominable Sin: Homosexualities in Early Colonial Nahua Society. Hispanic American Historical Review. 85, 555–594 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-85-4-555.
324.
STOUT, N.M.: Feminists, Queers and Critics: Debating the Cuban Sex Trade. Journal of Latin American Studies. 40, (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022216X08004732.
325.
Torres, L., Pertusa, I.: Tortilleras: Hispanic and U.S. Latina lesbian expression. Temple University Press, Philadelphia (2003).
326.
Young, A.: Gays under the Cuban Revolution. Grey Fox Press, San Francisco (1981).
327.
Armstrong, G., Giulianotti, R.: Football cultures and identities. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
328.
Arbena, J., LaFrance, D.G.: Sport in Latin America and the Caribbean. Scholarly Resources, Wilmington, Del (2002).
329.
Archetti, E.P.: Argentinian football: a ritual of violence? The International Journal of the History of Sport. 9, 209–235 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1080/09523369208713791.
330.
Balderston, D., Guy, D.J.: Sex and sexuality in Latin America. New York University Press, New York (1997).
331.
Melhuus, M., Stølen, K.A.: Machos, mistresses, madonnas: contesting the power of Latin American gender imagery. Verso, London (1996).
332.
Howell, S.: The ethnography of moralities. Routledge, London (1997).
333.
Archetti, E.P.: Masculinities: football, polo and the tango in Argentina. Berg, Oxford (1999).
334.
John R. Betts: Mind and Body in Early American Thought. The Journal of American History. 54, 787–805 (1968). https://doi.org/10.2307/1918070.
335.
Breen, T.H.: Horses and Gentlemen: The Cultural Significance of Gambling among the Gentry of Virginia. The William and Mary Quarterly. 34, (1977). https://doi.org/10.2307/1925315.
336.
Mangan, J.A., Costa, L.P. da: Sport in Latin American society: past and present. Frank Cass, London (2002).
337.
Elsey, B.: Citizens and sportsmen: fútbol and politics in twentieth-century Chile. University of Texas Press, Austin (2011).
338.
Alan M. Klein: Tender Machos: Masculine Contrasts in the Mexican Baseball League. Sociology of Sport Journal - SSJ. 12, 370–388 (2010).
339.
Armstrong, G., Giulianotti, R.: Football cultures and identities. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
340.
Robert M. Levine: Sport and Society: The Case of Brazilian Futebol. Luso-Brazilian Review. 17, 233–252 (1980).
341.
Lockley, T.: ‘The manly game’: Cricket and masculinity in Savannah, Georgia in 1859. The International Journal of the History of Sport. 20, 77–98 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/09523360412331305793.
342.
Magazine, R.: Golden and blue like my heart: masculinity, youth, and power among soccer fans in Mexico City. University of Arizona Press, Tucson (2007).
343.
Martin, S.C.: Don quixote and leatherstocking: hunting, class and masculinity in the American south, 1800–40. The International Journal of the History of Sport. 12, 61–79 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1080/09523369508713910.
344.
Mason, T.: Passion of the people?: football in South America. Verso, London (1995).
345.
Miller, R., Crolley, L.: Football in the Americas: fútbol, futebol, soccer. Institute for the Study of the Americas, London (2007).
346.
NACLA Report on the Americas.
347.
Mangan, J.A., Walvin, J.: Manliness and morality: middle-class masculinity in Britain and  America, 1800-1940. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1987).
348.
Riess, S.A.: Sport and the redefinition of American middle‐class masculinity. The International Journal of the History of Sport. 8, 5–27 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1080/09523369108713743.
349.
Riess, S.A.: Sport in industrial America, 1850-1920. Harlan Davidson, Wheeling, Ill (1995).
350.
Wiggins, D.K.: Sport in America: from wicked amusement to national obsession. Human Kinetics, Champaign, IL (1995).
351.
Andrew, D.T.: The code of honour and its critics: The opposition to duelling in England, 1700–1850. Social History. 5, 409–434 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1080/03071028008567487.
352.
César Braga-Pinto: Journalists, Capoeiras, and the Duel in Nineteenth-Century Rio de Janeiro. Hispanic American Historical Review. 94, 581–614 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2802642.
353.
Bruce, D.D.: Violence and culture in the antebellum South. University of Texas Press, Austin (1979).
354.
Caulfield, S., Chambers, S.C., Putnam, L.: Honor, status, and law in modern Latin America. Duke University Press, Durham (2005).
355.
Chambers, S.C.: From subjects to citizens: honor, gender, and politics in Arequipa, Peru, 1780-1854. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Pa (1999).
356.
Gayol, S.: ‘Honor Moderno’: The Significance of Honor in Fin-de-Siecle Argentina. Hispanic American Historical Review. 84, 475–498 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-84-3-475.
357.
Gorn, E.J.: ‘Gouge and Bite, Pull Hair and Scratch’: The Social Significance of Fighting in the Southern Backcountry. The American Historical Review. 90, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/1860747.
358.
Gotkowitz, L.: Trading Insults: Honor, Violence, and the Gendered Culture of Commerce in Cochabamba, Bolivia, 1870s-1950s. Hispanic American Historical Review. 83, 83–118 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-83-1-83.
359.
Greenberg, K.S.: Honor & slavery: lies, duels, noses, masks, ... and gambling in the  old South. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1996).
360.
Smith, R.T.: Kinship ideology and practice in Latin America. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (1984).
361.
Gutierrez, R.A.: Honor Ideology, Marriage Negotiation, and Class-Gender Domination in New Mexico, 1690-1846. Latin American Perspectives. 12, 81–104 (1985).
362.
Gutiérrez, R.A.: When Jesus came, the corn mothers went away: marriage, sexuality, and power in New Mexico, 1500-1846. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1991).
363.
Gutiérrez, R.A.: When Jesus came, the Corn Mothers went away: marriage, sexuality,  and power in New Mexico, 1500-1846. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1991).
364.
Robert M. Ireland: The Libertine Must Die: Sexual Dishonor and the Unwritten Law in the Nineteenth-Century United States. Journal of Social History. 23, 27–44 (1989).
365.
Johnson, L.L., Lipsett-Rivera, S. eds: The faces of honor: sex, shame, and violence in colonial Latin America. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1998).
366.
Johnson, L.L., Lipsett-Rivera, S.: The Faces of honor: sex, shame, and violence in colonial Latin  America. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, N.M. (1998).
367.
Martin, C.E.: Popular Speech and Social Order in Northern Mexico, 1650–1830. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 32, (1990). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417500016509.
368.
Karl Monsma: Words Spoken and Written: Divergent Meanings of Honor among Elites in Nineteenth-Century Rio Grande do Sul. Hispanic American Historical Review. 92, 269–302 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-1545692.
369.
Robert A. Nye: Fencing, the Duel and Republican Manhood in the Third Republic. Journal of Contemporary History. 25, 365–377 (1990).
370.
Parker, D.S.: The Duelling Debate in Latin America, 1870-1920: Repress, Legalise, or Just Look the Other Way? Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. 9, 15–37 (1998). https://doi.org/10.7202/030490ar.
371.
Parker, D.S.: Law, Honor, and Impunity in Spanish America: The Debate over Dueling, 1870-1920. Law and History Review. 19, (2001). https://doi.org/10.2307/744132.
372.
Patterson, O.: The Code of Honor in the Old South. Reviews in American History. 12, (1984). https://doi.org/10.2307/2702550.
373.
Piccato, P.: Politics and the Technology of Honor: Dueling in Turn-of-the-Century Mexico. Journal of Social History. 33, 331–354 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.1999.0072.
374.
Sills, D.L.: International encyclopedia of the social sciences. Macmillan, London (1968).
375.
Pitt-Rivers, J.: The fate of Shechem, or, The politics of sex: essays in the  anthropology of the Mediterranean. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (etc.) (1977).
376.
Pitt-Rivers, J.A.: The people of the Sierra. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1961).
377.
Lavrín, A.: Sexuality and marriage in colonial Latin America. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln (1989).
378.
Wyatt-Brown, B.: Southern honor: ethics and behavior in the Old South. Oxford University Press, New York (1983).
379.
Wyatt-Brown, B.: Southern honor: ethics and behavior in the Old South. Oxford University Press, New York (1982).
380.
Wyatt-Brown, B.: Honor and violence in the Old South. Oxford University Press, New York (1986).
381.
Alencar, J.M. de, Landers, C.E.: Iracema: a novel. Oxford University Press, New York (2000).
382.
Altamirano, I.M.: El Zarco: the bandit. Folio Society, London (1957).
383.
Arenas, R.: Before night falls. Serpent’s Tail, London (2001).
384.
Arenas, R.: Before night falls. Viking, New York (1993).
385.
Azevedo, A.: The slum: a novel. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
386.
Azevedo, A.: The slum: a novel. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
387.
Barker, M., Sabin, R.: The lasting of the Mohicans: history of an American myth. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson (1995).
388.
Chomsky, A., Carr, B., Smorkaloff, P.M.: The Cuba reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press, Durham (2003).
389.
Baym, N.: The Women of Cooper’s Leatherstocking Tales. American Quarterly. 23, (1971). https://doi.org/10.2307/2712252.
390.
Berger, J.: Ghosts of Liberalism: Morrison’s Beloved and the Moynihan Report. PMLA. 111, (1996). https://doi.org/10.2307/463165.
391.
Berzon, J.R.: Neither white nor black: the mulatto character in American fiction. New York University Press, New York (1978).
392.
Bobo, J.: Sifting Through the Controversy: Reading The Color Purple. Callaloo. (1989). https://doi.org/10.2307/2931568.
393.
Borges, J.L., Hurley, A.: Collected fictions. Penguin Books, New York (1999).
394.
Butler, M.D.: Narrative Structure and Historical Process in The Last of the Mohicans. American Literature. 48, (1976). https://doi.org/10.2307/2925067.
395.
Patrick Chura: Prolepsis and Anachronism: Emmet Till and the Historicity of to Kill a Mockingbird. The Southern Literary Journal. 32, 1–26 (2000).
396.
Clark, R.: James Fenimore Cooper: new critical essays. Vision, London (1985).
397.
Cooper, J.F.: The deerslayer. Bantam, New York (1982).
398.
Cooper, J.F.: The last of the Mohicans. Penguin Books, New York (1986).
399.
Faulkner, W.: Absalom, Absalom! Penguin, Harmondsworth (1971).
400.
Fiedler, L.A.: An end to innocence: essays on culture and politics. Stein and Day, New York (1972).
401.
García Márquez, G.: Chronicle of a death foretold. Pan, London (1983).
402.
Fox-Genovese, E.: Scarlett O’Hara: The Southern Lady as New Woman. American Quarterly. 33, (1981). https://doi.org/10.2307/2712525.
403.
Gómez de Avellaneda, G.: Sab ; and, Autobiography. University of Texas Press, Austin (1993).
404.
Gómez de Avellaneda, G.: Sab. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2001).
405.
Tracy L. Devine Guzmán: ‘Diacuí Killed Iracema’: Indigenism, Nationalism and the Struggle for Brazilianness. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 24, 92–122 (2005).
406.
Haberly, D.T.: Women and Indians: The Last of the Mohicans and the Captivity Tradition. American Quarterly. 28, (1976). https://doi.org/10.2307/2712539.
407.
Remnant, M. ed: Plays by women: Vol.5. Methuen, London (1986).
408.
Harwell, R.B.: Gone with the wind as book and film. University of South Carolina Press, Columbia, S.C. (1983).
409.
Hawthorne, N.: The scarlet letter. Penguin, London (2003).
410.
Hite, M.: Romance, Marginality, Matrilineage: Alice Walker’s ‘The Color Purple’ and Zora Neale Hurston’s ‘Their Eyes Were Watching God’. NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction. 22, (1989). https://doi.org/10.2307/1345522.
411.
Gates, H.L.: Reading black, reading feminist: a critical anthology. Meridian Book, New York, NY (1990).
412.
Alabama Law Review. 45, (1994).
413.
Gates, H.L.: Reading black, reading feminist: a critical anthology. Meridian Book, New York, NY (1990).
414.
Lee, H.: To kill a mockingbird. Arrow, London (2006).
415.
Martin, V.: Property. Abacus, London (2003).
416.
Ramírez, H.M.: La reinterpretación paródica del código de honor en Crónica de una muerte anunciada. Hispania. 73, (1990). https://doi.org/10.2307/344260.
417.
Miller, B.K.: Women in Hispanic literature: icons and fallen idols. University of California Press, Berkeley (1983).
418.
Mitchell, M.: Gone with the wind. Macmillan, London (1992).
419.
Mitchell, M.: Gone with the wind. Macmillan, London (1991).
420.
Morrison, T.: Beloved. Vintage Classic, London (2007).
421.
Peck, H.D.: New essays on the Last of the Mohicans. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1992).
422.
Person, L.S.: The American Eve: Miscegenation and a Feminist Frontier Fiction. American Quarterly. 37, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/2712615.
423.
Pyron, D.A.: Recasting ‘Gone with the wind’ in American culture. University Presses of Florida, Miami (1983).
424.
Puig, M.: Kiss of the spider woman. Arena, London (1984).
425.
Puig, M.: Kiss of the spider woman. Knopf, New York (1979).
426.
Santiago, S.: Stella Manhattan. Duke University Press, Durham, NC (1994).
427.
Schlau, S.: Stranger in a Strange Land: The Discourse of Alienation in Gomez de Avellaneda’s Abolitionist Novel Sab. Hispania. 69, (1986). https://doi.org/10.2307/342729.
428.
Schulman, I.A.: The Portrait of the Slave: Ideology and Aesthetics in the Cuban Antislavery Novel. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 292, 356–367 (1977).
429.
Hönnighausen, L., Lerda, V.G.: Rewriting the South: history and fiction. Francke, Tübingen (1993).
430.
Shange, N.: For colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is  enuf: a choreopoem. Bantam, Toronto (1980).
431.
Shange, N.: Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo: a novel. Methuen, London (1983).
432.
Sommer, D.: Foundational fictions: the national romances of Latin America. University of California Press, Berkeley (1991).
433.
Taylor, H.: Scarlett’s women: ‘Gone with the wind’ and its female fans. Virago, London (1989).
434.
Stevens, D.F.: Based on a true story: Latin American history at the movies. SR Books, Wilmington, Del (1997).
435.
Toomer, J.: Cane. Liveright, New York (1975).
436.
Treece, D.: Exiles, allies, rebels: Brazil’s indianist movement, indigenist  politics, and the imperial nation-state. Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn (2000).
437.
Villaverde, C., Brouwers-Fischer, S.: Cecilia Valdés or El Angel Hill / Cirilo Villaverde ; translated from the Spanish by Helen Lane ; edited with an introduction and notes by Sibylle Fischer. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005).
438.
McEwan, N.: The color purple. Longman, Harlow (2003).
439.
Williams, C.: Cuban Anti-slavery Narrative through Postcolonial Eyes: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda’s Sab. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 27, 155–175 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1470-9856.2008.00261.x.
440.
Williams, S.A.: Dessa Rose. Virago, London (1998).
441.
Bemberg, M.L.: Camila, (1998).
442.
Rosi, Dir.F.: Chronicle of a Death Foretold, (1987).
443.
Gutiérrez Alea, T.: Fresa y chocolate: Strawberry & chocolate, (2009).
444.
Fleming, V.: Gone with the wind, (2004).
445.
Petrie, D., Hansberry, L.: A Raisin in the sun, (1992).
446.
Mulligan, R.: To kill a mockingbird, (2005).