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The Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (LACS) together with the Brazil Initiative at LACS feature presenters from diverse disciplines. LACS organizes and sponsors more than 50 public lectures, workshops, performances, and conferences over the course of the academic year. 

In addition to our yearly programming, the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (LACS) and the Brazil Initiative at LACS are happy to consider funding requests to co-sponsor lectures, events, performances,  and activities that coincide with the center's mission to promote a broad and deep understanding of the region. Request to co-sponsor an event »
 

Aiton Lecture: Señorita Telefonista: Sexual Harassment, Pregnancy Discrimination, and Class Identities in Early Twentieth Century Mexico City

Susie S. Porter, University of Utah
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
4:00-5:30 PM
1014 Tisch Hall Map
At the height of worker mobilization in revolutionary Mexico City some of the most combative workers were telephone operators. In this talk, Susie S. Porter takes us from switchboards to union halls, and into the streets as working women fought for better wages and against marriage bans, pregnancy discrimination, and sexual harassment.

Telephone operators’ struggles to defend their bodily autonomy were historically contingent and constructed through the material and discursive conditions of class. Countervailing practices of class distinction shaped women’s capacity to speak and informed their activism. As languages of class circulated––by management, organized labor, working men, and working women themselves––working and middle- class identities were made and unmade. The success of organized labor hung in the balance.

Susie S. Porter, Professor of History and Gender Studies at the University of Utah, is the author of two award-winning books: Workingwomen in Mexico City: Public Discourses and Material Conditions, 1879-1931 (University of Arizona Press, 2003); and, From Angel to Office Worker: Middle-Class Identity and Female Consciousness in Mexico, 1890-1950 (University of Nebraska Press, 2018). Spanish-language versions of both books were published by El Colegio de Michoacán Press.

Her forthcoming book is titled: Señorita Telefonista: Sexual Harassment, Gender Discrimination, and Class Identities in Early Twentieth-Century Mexico City (University of Nebraska, 2026)

Porter is also co-editor and contributor to 3 edited volumes and a documents reader in Mexican history. Susie is a Member of the Mexican Academy of History (as Corresponsal Internacional). She has held residential fellowships at the Madrid Institute for Advanced Studies (2022-23) and L’Institut d’Études Avancées de Nantes, France (2023-24).

She serves as a country conditions expertise for asylum cases, was a co-founder of the Westside Leadership Institute (Spanish language version) and works as an organizer with the Salt Lake City Latinx community. She served as chair of the Gender Studies Division (2010-2020) and, since 2021, as director of the Center for Latin American Studies. For her work in the community, Porter was designated Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at the University of Utah (2019).

This lecture is sponsored by the Aiton Lecture Committee.
Building: Tisch Hall
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: History, Humanities, Interdisciplinary, International, Latin America
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Department of History, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies