Contemporary Mexican-American Women Novelists: Toward a Feminist IdentityP. Lang, 1996 - 110 páginas Contemporary Mexican-American women novelists - some of whom are moving toward a Chicana feminist construct - have produced very exciting work. Using the works of both Gloria Anzaldúa and Elaine Showalter as theoretical frameworks, this study argues for a specific Chicana feminism whose roots are both in and outside the Mexican-American culture. The authors included in Contemporary Mexican-American Women Novelists are Ana Castillo, Denise Chávez, Sandra Cisneros, Lucha Corpi, Margarita Cota-Cádenas, Roberta Fernández, Laura del Fuego, Irene Beltrán Hernández, Mary Helen Ponce, and Estela Portillo Trambley. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 85
Página 3
... Mexican and Mexican - American women are central to the emergence of Chicana feminism . II . Feminism and Mexican Americans Margarita Melville's work Twice a Minority : Mexican American Women ( 1980 ) explores the concept that Mexican ...
... Mexican and Mexican - American women are central to the emergence of Chicana feminism . II . Feminism and Mexican Americans Margarita Melville's work Twice a Minority : Mexican American Women ( 1980 ) explores the concept that Mexican ...
Página 6
... Mexican - American women are being published more consistently . A few presses represent the bulk of publication houses that regularly publish Mexican - American women : Arte Público Press of Houston ; the Bilingual Press , originally ...
... Mexican - American women are being published more consistently . A few presses represent the bulk of publication houses that regularly publish Mexican - American women : Arte Público Press of Houston ; the Bilingual Press , originally ...
Página 47
... Mexican and Mexican - American culture . Catholicism becomes inseparable from Mexican traditions , and any celebration of cultural heritage includes a veneration of Catholicism . The American ideal of separation of church and state is ...
... Mexican and Mexican - American culture . Catholicism becomes inseparable from Mexican traditions , and any celebration of cultural heritage includes a veneration of Catholicism . The American ideal of separation of church and state is ...
Contenido
Acknowledgments | 1 |
Toward a Mestiza Feminist Poetics | 19 |
The Politics of Culture | 34 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 2 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Contemporary Mexican-American Women Novelists: Toward a Feminist Identity María González Vista de fragmentos - 1996 |
Términos y frases comunes
accommodationist acknowledge American feminist Ana Castillo Anglo Arte Público articulate assimilation assimilationist assumptions attempt audience aural authors barrio Beltrán Hernández Bilingual Blanca borderland Castillo Catholicism Cece Cherrie Moraga Chicana feminism Chicana feminist Chicana Literature Chicana writer code-switching conception of culture consciousness Corpi counterstance creates critique curandera defined Delia Denise Chávez describes dialogue difference dominant culture Doña Anita duality English and Spanish Esperanza Estela Portillo Trambley feminine Feminist Criticism feminist phase Fuego gender roles Gloria Anzaldúa gynocriticism healer healing Herrera-Sobek Hispanic House on Mango Houston identifies identity indigenous feminism Kata Kata's La Malinche language Latina literary main character mainstream male Malinche Malintzin Mango Street Menu Girls mestiza Mexican culture Mexican-American community Mexican-American women novelists Mexico mother narrative narrator nonstandard novel patriarchy Politics reader relationship represents Rocío Sandra Cisneros sexual Showalter Showalter's standard English standard forms story Tía Pancha Tonantzín traditional Trini understanding voice wedding woman women writers writing Yarbro-Bejarano