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Telling Border Life Stories: Four Mexican American Women Writers (Rio Grande/Río Bravo:  Borderlands Culture and Traditions #18)

Telling Border Life Stories: Four Mexican American Women Writers (Rio Grande/Río Bravo: Borderlands Culture and Traditions #18)

Current price: $60.00
Publication Date: May 21st, 2013
Publisher:
Texas A&M University Press
ISBN:
9781603448048
Pages:
248

Description

Voices from the borderlands push against boundaries in more ways than one, as Donna M. Kabalen de Bichara ably demonstrates in this investigation into the twentieth-century autobiographical writing of four women of Mexican origin who lived in the American Southwest.

Until recently, little attention has been paid to the writing of the women included in this study. As Kabalen de Bichara notes, it is precisely such historical exclusion of texts written by Mexican American women that gives particular significance to the reexamination of the five autobiographical works that provide the focus for this in-depth study.

“Early Life and Education” and Dew on the Thorn by Jovita González (1904–83), deal with life experiences in Texas and were likely written between 1926 and the 1940s; both texts were published in 1997. Romance of a Little Village Girl, first published in 1955, focuses on life in New Mexico, and was written by Cleofas Jaramillo (1878–1956) when the author was in her seventies. A Beautiful, Cruel Country, by Eva Antonio Wilbur-Cruce (1904–98), introduces the reader to history and a way of life that developed in the cultural space of Arizona. Created over a ten-year period, this text was published in 1987, just eleven years before the author’s death. Hoyt Street, by Mary Helen Ponce (b. 1938), began as a research paper during the period of the autobiographer’s undergraduate studies (1974–80), and was published in its present form in 1993.

These border autobiographies can be understood as attempts on the part of the Mexican American female autobiographers to put themselves into the text and thus write their experiences into existence.

About the Author

DONNA M. KABALEN DE BICHARA is chair of the Department of Humanities at Tecnológico de Monterrey, ITESM. She is the author or coauthor of three other books.

Praise for Telling Border Life Stories: Four Mexican American Women Writers (Rio Grande/Río Bravo: Borderlands Culture and Traditions #18)

“The ultimate success of this project lies in its clear, clean, and measured delineation of a critical biography for each author studied here. Each author’s biography is cleverly and imaginatively foreworded. It would ably fill gaps in Chicano/a literary studies, especially in the sub-field of autobiography and also recovery scholarship of pre-Chicano Movement writers.”--Jose F. Aranda Jr., associate professor, Rice University
— Jose F. Aranda, Jr.

“Telling Border Life Stories tackles a difficult subject in an elegant and accessible fashion even as it engages complex theories (Lotman’s work on semiotics and Pêcheux’s work on discourse, for example) to examine five narratives by Mexican American women writers that counter the patriarchal social reality of their lives.”--Norma Cantú, Professor of English and US Latina/o Studies, University of Missouri, Kansas City



— Dr. Norma Cantú