Kissing the Mango Tree: Puerto Rican Women Rewriting American LiteratureArte Público Press, 2002 - 188 من الصفحات Cultural Writing. Latino/Latina Studies. Feminist Studies. Pioneering novelist and short-story writer Nicholasa Mohr broke onto the literary scene of ethnic autobiography in the early 1970s, but it took another decade for other Nuyorican women to follow the path that she cut. KISSING THE MANGO TREE is the first and only book to examine the works of the most popular Puerto Rican women writers from the perspective of feminist literary criticism. In separate chapters devoted to such writers as Judith Ortiz Cofer, Sandra MarAAa Esteves, Nicholasa Mohr and Esmeralda Santiago, Rivera locates their works within the framework of feminist theory and literature, seeing them as "women with macho asserting their powers to record their own versions of their memories, to own their own bodies." This groundbreaking study is accompanied by a complete bibliography of the six writers' works and secondary sources of feminist, Latino and ethno-poetic criticism and theory. |
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... dice . Although there has always been racism in Puerto Rico , it was never expressed in the physical segregation and violence that took place in the United States . Luz María Umpierre - Herrera , like Sandra María Esteves , is very much ...
... dice . Although there has always been racism in Puerto Rico , it was never expressed in the physical segregation and violence that took place in the United States . Luz María Umpierre - Herrera , like Sandra María Esteves , is very much ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
American Aparicio artist Aurora Levins Morales autobiography Barrio become begins bildung Bildungsroman body child childhood collection colonization color creative denounces depicts describes discourse el País Esmeralda Santiago essay explains father feelings female feminist Flores genre Getting Home Alive girl grandmother Hispanic husband images insists Irigaray island jíbara Juan Judith Ortiz Cofer Julia de Burgos language Latin lesbian literary literature lives Lolita Lebrón Luz María Lydia Margarita Poems maternal metaphor Miguel Algarín Moraga Morales and Levins mother and daughter motherhood Nicholasa Mohr Nilda notions Nuyorican oppression orishas pain patria patriarchal poet poetry political Puerto Rican literature Puertorriqueña racial racism recognizes René Marqués Rico Río Piedras rituals Rosario Morales salsa Sandra María Esteves santería sexual silence Silent Dancing social Spanish speak stories storytelling struggle suffocating survival Taíno takes tion traditional tropical ultimately Umpierre Umpierre-Herrera United voice wants woman words York young