Women and ETA is the first book-length study of women in radical Basque nationalism. It uses a unique body of oral history interviews to examine the history of women as supporters and direct participants in ETA, including violence, from 1959 to the period before ETA's declaration of a permanent ceasefire in March 2006.
Carrie Hamilton is Reader in Spanish at Roehampton University, London
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Gender, nationalism and memory
1 Growing up nationalist
2 Gendering the roots of radical nationalism
3 Nationalism goes public
4 Constructing the male warrior and the homefront heroine
5 From the domestic front to armed struggle
6 The final front: arrest and prison
7 Nationalism and feminism
8 Women and the Basque conflict in the new millennium
Conclusion
Glossary
Appendix 1: Interviews
Appendix 2: Women in ETA
Select bibliography