Gender and Allegory in Transamerican Fiction and Performance
Autor K. Suggen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 sep 2008
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780230604766
ISBN-10: 0230604765
Pagini: 241
Ilustrații: XVIII, 241 p.
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:2008
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan US
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0230604765
Pagini: 241
Ilustrații: XVIII, 241 p.
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:2008
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan US
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Cultural Politics in Trans-America: Identity, Narrativity, and Allegory * 'The Ultimate Rebellion': The Political Fictions of Chicana Sexuality and Community * Apocalyptic Modernities: Transamerican Allegory, Revolution, and Indigeneity in Almanac of the Dead * Allegory and Transcultural Narrative Ethics: Difference and Storytelling in Rosario Castellanos's Oficio de Tinieblas * Encrypted Diasporas: Writing, Affect, and the Nation in Zoé Valdés's Café Nostalgia * Performing Suspended Migrations: Novels and Spoken Word by U.S. Latinas * Gender and Narrative Pedagogies in the Americas
Recenzii
"In Meditations on Quixote, Ortega y Gasset notes that the writer's choice of literary genre reflects 'at one and the same time a certain thing to be said and the only way to say it fully.' Sugg brilliantly affirms this insight by showing how writers such as Leslie Marmon Silko, Rosario Castellanos, Zoé Valdés, Cherrie Moraga, and Julia Álvarez, engage allegorical and performative strategies to say things that the novel can no longer say, to transcend identity politics and its positivist paradigms, to reposition the relations of consciousness and community. Furthermore, her transamerican perspective on these profoundly transamerican writers complicates the cultural connections that she (and they) make between genre and gender. This book will serve as a model for the comparative study of emerging expressive forms in and across the Americas." - Lois Parkinson Zamora, University of Houston
"Sugg's Gender and Allegory in Transamerican Fiction and Performance is itself an impressive performance. Critically and theoretically, it manages not merely to recover, but to reconceptualize and redeploy the productive work of allegory in a wide variety of mostly contemporary texts and performances. In doing so it demonstrates both allegory's versatility and resilience as a tool for future critical feminist work in such disciplines as cultural, performance and literary studies. Institutionally, it contributes quite valuably to the larger reconfigurations of both fields andarchives, of feeling and of knowledge, currently under way in a number of intersecting scholarly fields." - Ricardo L. Ortíz, Director of Graduate Studies, Associate Professor of U.S. Latino Literature and Culture, Department of English, Georgetown University
"Sugg's Gender and Allegory in Transamerican Fiction and Performance is itself an impressive performance. Critically and theoretically, it manages not merely to recover, but to reconceptualize and redeploy the productive work of allegory in a wide variety of mostly contemporary texts and performances. In doing so it demonstrates both allegory's versatility and resilience as a tool for future critical feminist work in such disciplines as cultural, performance and literary studies. Institutionally, it contributes quite valuably to the larger reconfigurations of both fields andarchives, of feeling and of knowledge, currently under way in a number of intersecting scholarly fields." - Ricardo L. Ortíz, Director of Graduate Studies, Associate Professor of U.S. Latino Literature and Culture, Department of English, Georgetown University
Notă biografică
Katherine Sugg is Assistant Professor of English, Central Connecticut State University.