ERIC: Education Resources Information Center Skip main navigation
Alert:
Limited Availability of Full-Text Documents. Click here for more information, or here to request the return of a PDF online.


Help Help Help Movie Tutorial Help Help | Help Movie Tutorial Help Help | Help Movie Tutorial Help With This Page Help With This Page

back Back to Search Results    permalink Help Help Permalink    Share this clipboard Share this record

Record Details - EJ769174
Title: The Chicana Subject in Ana Castillo's Fiction and the Discursive Zone of Chicana/o Theory

Full-Text Availability Options:

More Info:
Help Help | Help Movie Tutorial
Help Finding Full Text
More Info:
Help Help
Find in a Library
Publisher's website

Related Items: Show Related Items
Click on any of the links below to perform a new search
Title:The Chicana Subject in Ana Castillo's Fiction and the Discursive Zone of Chicana/o Theory
Authors:Carson, Benjamin D.
Descriptors:American IndiansMexican AmericansFictionHispanic American LiteratureHistoryFemalesPostmodernismRacial IdentificationIdeologyTheories
Source:Bilingual Review, v28 n2 p109-126 May-Aug 2004-2007
More Info:
Help Help
Peer Reviewed:
Yes
Publisher:Bilingual Review Press. Arizona State University, P.O. Box 875303, Tempe, AZ 85287-5303. Tel: 800-965-2280; Tel: 408-965-3867; Fax: 480-965-8309; e-mail: brp@asu.edu; Web site: http://www.asu.edu/brp/brp.html
Publication Date:2007-00-00
Pages:18
Pub Types:Journal Articles; Opinion Papers
Abstract:In the world of Chicana fiction, Ana Castillo has achieved the kind of status Maxine Hong Kingston has attained within Asian American discourse. Castillo's work is popular not only with the general reading public but in many academic circles as well. What sets Castillo apart from so many other Chicana fiction writers is that she is also a theorist, and her "Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma" (1994) has achieved widespread acclaim. In "Massacre of the Dreamers," a collection of critical essays on the experience of those whom Castillo calls "Mexic Amerindians," Castillo suggests rather explicitly that, while Chicana identity is fragmented due to the vicissitudes of history, there is an essential "Mexic Amerindian" identity that can be "asserted." In order to illuminate the ways in which Castillo theorizes and constructs Chicana identity, the author looks at the relationship between Castillo's own theoretical work, "Massacre of the Dreamers," and her fiction, including "The Mixquiahuala Letters" and "So Far From God." He argues that there is a curious incongruity between how Castillo theorizes the Chicana subject and how her characters perform subjectivity in her fiction. While Castillo's fiction not only exemplifies and performs "the arcane mysteries of absence, trace, and the slippery possibilities of presence" that are the hallmark of postmodernism, in "Massacre of the Dreamers" Castillo nostalgically searches for an originating moment that will ground her Mexic Amerindian identity (Smith 6). In this article, the author looks first at the important ways Chicana/o theorists Gloria Anzaldua, Chela Sandoval, Emma Perez, and Guillermo Gomez-Pena theorize the Chicana/o subject and the ideological terrain in which it circulates before going into the details of Castillo's work. (Contains 16 notes.)
Abstractor:ERIC
Reference Count:70

Note:N/A
Identifiers:Jamaica (Kingston)
Record Type:Journal
Level:N/A
Institutions:N/A
Sponsors:N/A
ISBN:N/A
ISSN:ISSN-0094-5366
Audiences:N/A
Languages:English
Education Level:N/A
Direct Link:http://www.asu.edu/brp/bilin/bilin.html
 

back Back to Search Results



Notice of Language Assistance: English  |  español  |  中文: 繁體版  |  Việt-ngữ  |  한국어  |  Tagalog  |  Русский