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(2006) Being Indian in Hueyapan, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

The history of Doña Zeferina and her family

Judith Friedlander

pp. 31-52

Although kinship rules and residence patterns favor the paternal side of the family, Doña Zeferina's story is one in which mothers, not fathers, figure prominently. For three generations, her family relied on women who, for a variety of reasons, never lived very long with the fathers of their children. First, her grandmother, then her mother, and finally, Doña Zeferina herself supported their families essentially alone. Of the three women, only her grandmother followed tradition and settled down in her husband's house. But even she ended up having to raise her children without the help of a man. In the following two generations, the women stayed home with their mothers, in the house where they themselves had grown up.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230601659_3

Full citation:

Friedlander, J. (2006). The history of Doña Zeferina and her family, in Being Indian in Hueyapan, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 31-52.

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