At 15:23 17/03/2007, jim wrote:
FWIW, the MS thesaurus tells me that "protagonist" has "hero" as a
synonym. We on the left have long talked about the heroism of working
people. (Of course, in the 1992 silly sci-fi cyberpunk novel _Snow
Crash_ by Neal Stephenson, the hero is named Hiro Protagonist.

When I googled 'protagonistic', appropriately the first item was:



The Protagonistic Role of Women in Latin America





by Rachel Rodriguez

Raquel Rodriguez is a Puerto Rican pastor and theologian who teaches
at the Ecumenical Department of Investigations (DEI) in San Jose, Costa Rica.

It is impossible not to notice the protagonistic role in society
which the women of Latin America and the Caribbean have played in
the last two decades. This role was even more massive and evident in
the 1980's.

There are many reasons why the women no longer play the traditional
role assigned to them by society and patriarchal culture, which
relegated them to the privacy of the home. Numerous studies conclude
that the principal reasons for this are the effects of the political
and economic crisis in Latin America and the Caribbean these past
two decades, and how this had touched their very existence, leading
them to a struggle for the defense of life and for survival. This
struggle is a result not only of the economic crisis, but of
political repression by the State.

One of the most significant features of this protagonistic role of
the women in society has been the capacity that many of them have
had to unite their efforts and confront the new role that they have
had to play in society in a collective and organized fashion. This
has prevented the march of the women from turning into an isolated
and individual effort. What began as an individual effort became, in
many cases, the beginning of women's organization. And these
organizations, in some cases, have become an even broader women's
movement. At this time we are beginning a new stage in which this
women's movement is becoming a social movement with sufficient
political power to act, organize and mobilize itself in order to
transform our patriarchal society in a more just society which excludes no one.

Groups such as the Mothers and Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo in
Argentina, the COMADRES in El Salvador (to name some of the groups
of women which arose as a result of state repression against the
women and their relatives), the popular soup-kitchens in Peru, the
production cooperatives in several countries in the region, the
artisan workshops, the small business enterprises are some of the
communitarian examples of struggle against the economic crisis and
political repression which speak to us of the political, economic
and social impact of the women...



Against Whom Are We Struggling?





We believe that one of the things which can help advance the women's
movement is the serious reflection on who is "our enemy." Who are we
struggling against? This reflection has been initiated and continues
to be part of the reflection of some of the groups within the
women's movement, but it has not reached all the groups. The reasons
are many. Here we want to emphasize two reasons we consider are very
important, without pretending these are the only reasons.

One reason may be found within the movement and has to do with the
genesis of the
rganization of women's collectives. The urgency for women to
confront the economic crisis has led them to a struggle for the
defense of life, and for personal survival and survival of the
family. This struggle becomes very difficult when it must confront
the injustices of the political-economic system, without the
necessary means which the system itself defines as indispensable.
This pushes the women towards organizing themselves, as they realize
that collectively that have more probability to survive the crisis.

Still, we have to recognize that this struggle consumes much energy
and time. The women have to develop all of their creativity to be
able to survive. This has been the history of many women's
collectives, especially during the 1980's when the political and
economic situation became even more critical in our region. The
crisis does not appear to be getting any better, and the women need
to find alternative ways of generating a real change in the social,
economic and political structures so that they won't always be
struggling just to survive. With the worsening of the economic
crisis, the women have to give much more time and energy to this
struggle. This situation has become one of the reasons why many
organizations have not been able to dedicate time to deepening their
reflection about where our efforts should be directed, so that there
can be a real change and genuine social transformation which permits
us to live without having to constantly struggle to survive.

The other reason why we have not been able to deepen our reflection
is external to the women's movement, but has to do with the
stereotypes which our patriarchal society has given our movement. We
say our "patriarchal society" because both men and women have
internalized the patriarchal ideology and reproduce it, unless they
have become aware and have made an option to struggle against it....
http://www.epica.org/Library/women/la_women.htm
Michael A. Lebowitz
Professor Emeritus
Economics Department
Simon Fraser University
Burnaby, B.C., Canada V5A 1S6

Currently based in Venezuela.
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