Front cover image for Women in Uruguayan Communism Contradictions and Ambiguities, 1920s-1960s

Peer-reviewed

Women in Uruguayan Communism Contradictions and Ambiguities, 1920s-1960s

This article examines the dynamics of women’s participation in the Communist Party of Uruguay (PCU) from the 1920s to the 1960s. Despite its commitment to women’s emancipation and to equality between men and women, the PCU’s attitudes towards gender equality were often contradictory and its messages were ambiguous. Though it promoted women’s participation, the Party oscillated between seeking to overcome social prejudices, upholding principled and dogmatic positions, and accommodating the conservative habits prevalent among the working class. Women were encouraged to take part in activities but not to assume leadership positions. The 1960s, ironically a period characterised by openness and political success, was a decade of regression in gender equality that stood in contrast to the Uruguayan Communists’ long trajectory concerning women’s rights

Article, 2018
Journal of Latin American Studies, 50, 20180801, 643
2018