Professor Donna Guy received her B.A. from Brandeis and her M.A. and
Ph.D. from Indiana University. She has taught at the University of California
at Los Angeles and the University of Arizona. At Arizona, she also served
for five years as the Director of the Latin American Area Center. Her
research interests include Women's History, History of Sexualtiy, Latin
American History, Argentine History, and Economic History.
Professor Guy joined the faculty in the fall of 2001.
She is the author of numerous books and articles. Her books include
Women Create the Welfare State: Performing Charity, Creating Rights in Argentina, 1880-1955 Durham: Duke University Press, (2009)
White Slavery and Mothers Alive and Dead: The Troubled Meeting of
Sex, Gender, Public Health and Progress in Latin America (2000), Contested Ground: Comparative Frontiers on the Northern and Southern Edges of the Spanish Empire, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1998 (co-edited with Thomas E. Sheridan), Feminisms and Internationalism , co-edited with Mrinalini Sinha and Angela Woollacott (London: Blackwell, 1999),
El sexo peligroso, La prostitución
legal en Buenos Aires, 1875-1955 (1994), and Sex and Danger in
Buenos Aires: Prostitution, Family, and Nationa in Argentina (1991), Sex and Sexuality in Latin America,. New York: New York University Press, 1997. (Co-edited with Daniel Balderston.)
among others. Her articles have appeared in Latin American Research
Review, Journal of Latin American Studies, Journal of Women's History,
Business History Review, Gender and History, and Business History Review,
among others.
Her current projects are Write to Me Argentina: Letters to Juan and Eva Peron, From Private Acts to Public Identities: The History of Sexualities with Rob Buffington.
Professor Guy has received a number of grants, fellowships, awards,
and served on many editorial boards. She was a Fulbright-Hays Senior
Lecturer in Great Britain in 1982-1983 and in Argentina in 1988. She
has both University Teachers' and Senior Summer Research grants from
the National Endowment for the Humanities. Her publications won the
Hubert Herring Memorial Prize in 1993 and the Thomas F. McGann Memorial
in 1991. In 1995-97 she was the President of the Conference on Latin
American History and she has been on the editorial boards of Hispanic
American Historical Review, Gender and History, and the Latin American
Historical Research Review. She has been the editor of the Journal of Women's History.
She has lectured and presented papers in Great Britain, Portugal, Mexico,
Uruguay, and Argentina."
Professor Guy maintains additional pages