"Torres, in the tradition of Gloria Anzaldúa, challenges women's communities to break free from 'desconocimientos' that limit their own agency. Accompanying the Guadalupanas of Kansas City, Torres provides a living and contemporary example of how a community of women navigate and gain consciousness about the structures that define, illuminate and restrict their identities. Once again the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe empowers marginalized communities to publicly proclaim their presence and the importance of their religio-cultural identity."
- Jeanette Rodriguez, Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, Seattle University, USA
'In this book, Chicana scholar Theresa Torres offers a lucid exploration of the role of the Guadalupanas in their neighborhood church in Kansas City; readers learn how the Guadalupanas' role while empowering was also limiting and how complex these roles play out in a community. The Paradox of Latina Religious Leadership in the Catholic Church is a contribution to religious studies, women's studies and fills a critical gap in the literature as there is little written about Mexican American women in the Midwest.'
- Norma Elia Cantú, Professor of Latina and Latino Studies, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
- Jeanette Rodriguez, Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, Seattle University, USA
'In this book, Chicana scholar Theresa Torres offers a lucid exploration of the role of the Guadalupanas in their neighborhood church in Kansas City; readers learn how the Guadalupanas' role while empowering was also limiting and how complex these roles play out in a community. The Paradox of Latina Religious Leadership in the Catholic Church is a contribution to religious studies, women's studies and fills a critical gap in the literature as there is little written about Mexican American women in the Midwest.'
- Norma Elia Cantú, Professor of Latina and Latino Studies, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA