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| | John W. Wertheimer | Popular Culture, Violence, and Religion in Gloria's Story | Law and History Review, 24.2 | The ... |
 | | Just recently in Quetzaltenango, Sully Samayoa Elizondo, my solicitous sister-in-law, was kind enough to interview, at my bidding, thirty-five approximate contemporaries of my article's Gloria—women, that is, born in or around the 1940s. |
 | | When one moves beyond full-blown massacres to explore the broader category of "all human rights violations and acts of violence" during the war years, the Department of Quetzaltenango still accounts for less than 2 percent of the national total. |
 | | He wonders, for instance, whether the enhanced tendency of women to sue for "denial of family support," beginning in the mid-1960s, provoked men to unleash a backlash of domestic and sexual violence. |
| www.historycooperative.org /journals/lhr/24.2/wertheimer1.html (3047 words) |
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