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Article Both Husbands and Banda (Gang) MembersConceptualizing Marital Conflict and Instability among Young Rural Migrants in Mexico CityUniversidad Iberoamericana In this article, I suggest a novel approach to the conceptualization of marital conflict and instability among rural migrants in Mexican cities. In previous studies, authors have attributed conjugal strife to mens efforts to express their independence and dominate their wives. Using ethnographic data collected among a specific category of young migrants in Mexico City, I posit that their marital dynamics as well as husbandsattempts at domination can be better understood by employing a unit of analysis that extends beyond the household itself to include husbands relationships to other men in groups they call bandas (gangs). In the banda, men try to obligate each other to spend time and resources that could otherwise be directed toward conjugal relationships. When wives make demands on the same limited resources and husbands refuse, making claims to a dominant and independent masculinity, they are responding to, while also obscuring, their obligations to other men.
Key Words: marital conflict masculinity gangs Mexico street children
Men and Masculinities, Vol. 7, No. 2,
144-165 (2004) |
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