Abstract
Evita, Thatcher and HRC walk into a glass ceiling... In this episode, John and Elizabeth are joined by MIT anthropologist Manduhai Buyandelger to discuss women in political power in Argentina, Mongolia, the UK, the United States and beyond. At the conversation's heart: Manduhai analyzes the legacy of "female quotas" in Soviet-era politics, as well as the narrow "lanes" that women politicians are sorted into. For starters, Elizabeth discusses Santa Evita, Tomás Eloy Martínez's riff on what happened to Evita Perón’s body before and after her death, and how much she looked, eventually, like Grace Kelly. John discusses old-school Marxist journalist Beatrix Campbell, who tells a compelling story about "why Women vote Tory" in her 1987 Iron Ladies; it includes a fascinating chapter on Margaret Thatcher's mix of "moral authoritarianism and economic liberalism." John also finds a Thatcherite strain in My Beautiful Laundrette. Manduhai then unfolds the story of vocal tone-switching female politicians learn to deploy, in Mongolia and elsewhere. John relates that to a recent podcast exposé that criticizes Theranos mastermind Elizabeth Holmes for deepening her voice in college. Manduhai's own article about how Mongolian female politicians present themselves is a brilliant introduction to how some of these questions play out elsewhere in the world. It includes some great political posters. Lastly, in Recallable Books, John recommends Hilary Mantel's "The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher," Elizabeth recommends the ethnography Iron, Gender and Power by Eugenia Herbert, and Manduhai recommends Clinton's Hard Choices, and then, for a shorter and less familiar pick, Jack Weatherford's The Secret History of the Mongol Queens.