Women of Color: Mother-Daughter Relationships in 20th-Century Literature
Editat de Elizabeth Brown-Guilloryen Limba Engleză Paperback – feb 1997
Prominent among the writers considered here are Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, Maxine Hong Kingston, Cherrie Moraga, Leslie Marmon Silko, and Amy Tan. Elizabeth Brown-Guillory and the other essayists examine the myths and reality surrounding the mother-daughter relationship in these writers' works. They show how women writers of color often portray the mother-daughter dyad as a love/hate relationship, in which the mother painstakingly tries to convey knowledge of how to survive in a racist, sexist, and classist world while the daughter rejects her mother's experiences as invalid in changing social times.
This book represents a further opening of the literary canon to twentieth-century women of color. Like the writings it surveys, it celebrates the joys of breaking silence and moving toward reconciliation and growth.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780292708471
ISBN-10: 0292708475
Pagini: 263
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:Univ of Texas P
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 0292708475
Pagini: 263
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:Univ of Texas P
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
Elizabeth Brown-Guillory is a playwright and Associate Professor of English at the University of Houston.
Cuprins
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction (Elizabeth Brown-Guillory)
- The Problems of Reading: Mother-Daughter Relationships and Indian Postcoloniality (Radhika Mohanram)
- A Continuum of Pain: A Woman’s Legacy in Alice Walker’s Possessing the Secret of Joy (Kimberly Joyce Pollock)
- “I was cryin’, all the people were cryin’, my mother was cryin’”: Aboriginality and Maternity in Sally Morgan’s My Place (Joyce Zonana)
- “My mother is here”: Buchi Emecheta’s Love Child (Patricia Lee Yongue)
- (Re)claiming the Race of the Mother: Cherríe Moraga’s Shadow of a Man, Giving Up the Ghost, and Heroes and Saints (Julia De Foor Jay)
- The Poetics of Matrilineage: Mothers and Daughters in the Poetry of African American Women, 1965-1985 (Fabian Clements Worshma)
- The Mother as Other: Orientalism in Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior (Sheryl A. Mylan)
- Love and Conflict: Mexican American Women Writers as Daughters (Maria Gonzalez)
- Mother-Daughter Relationships as Epistemological Structures: Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac of the Dead and Storyteller (Charlene Taylor Evans)
- Disrupted Motherlines: Mothers and Daughters in a Genderized, Sexualized, and Racialized World (Elizabeth Brown-Guillory)
- Voice, Mind, Self: Mother-Daughter Relationships in Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club and The Kitchen God’s Wife (M. Marie Booth Foster)
- To Make Herself: Mother-Daughter Conflicts in Toni Morrison’s Sula and Tar Baby (Lucille P. Fultz)
- Index
Descriere
This collection of original essays explores the mother-daughter relationship as it appears in the works of African, African American, Asian American, Mexican American, Native American, Indian, and Australian Aboriginal women writers.