Ay Tú!
Critical Essays on the Life and Work of Sandra Cisneros
Herausgeber: Saldívar-Hull, Sonia; Gano, Geneva M
Ay Tú!
Critical Essays on the Life and Work of Sandra Cisneros
Herausgeber: Saldívar-Hull, Sonia; Gano, Geneva M
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A comprehensive volume on the life and work of renowned Chicana author Sandra Cisneros.
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A comprehensive volume on the life and work of renowned Chicana author Sandra Cisneros.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Oktober 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 180mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 560g
- ISBN-13: 9781477329900
- ISBN-10: 1477329900
- Artikelnr.: 70103040
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Oktober 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 180mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 560g
- ISBN-13: 9781477329900
- ISBN-10: 1477329900
- Artikelnr.: 70103040
Sonia Saldívar-Hull and Geneva M. Gano
1. List of Illustrations
2. Preface. ¡Ay Tú! ¡Sí Yo! Nosotrxs: The Sinvergüenza Collective
3. Introduction. Her Fabulous Career: Sandra Cisneros’s Life/Work (Sonia
Saldívar-Hull and Geneva M. Gano)
4. Part I. ¡Ay, Qué Rico! Close Readings
* 1. Lingering with Complicity in Caramelo (Mary Pat Brady)
* 2. The Racial City: Navigating Chicago’s Racialized Space in The
House on Mango Street (Olga L. Herrera)
* 3. Telenovela Feeling in Sandra Cisneros’s Loose Woman: “I Think of
Me to Gluttony” (Adriana Estill)
* 4. “You Were Telling Cochinadas”: Performative Metaphors for
Storytelling in Sandra Cisneros’s Caramelo (Shanna M. Salinas)
* 5. Mapping the Decolonial: Community Cartography in Sandra Cisneros’s
Woman Hollering Creek (Teresa Hernández)
5. Part II. Love, Shame, and Sinvergüenzas
* 6. “Love the Only Way I Know How”: Cultivating Erotic Conocimiento in
the Work of Sandra Cisneros (Belinda Linn Rincón)
* 7. From Marginal to Sin Vergüenza: Overcoming School-Inflicted Shame
through Transgressive Literary Aesthetics in Sandra Cisneros’s Life
and Writing (Georgina Guzmán)
* 8. The Loose Woman and the Men of Ill Repute (Richard T. Rodríguez)
* 9. Wild, Wicked, and Crazy Brave Tongues: Locating the Collaborative
Origins of Sandra Cisneros’s and Joy Harjo’s Poetic Voices (Audrey
Goodman)
* 10. “Hay Que Inventarnos / We Must Invent Ourselves”: The Impact of
Norma Alarcón and Sandra Cisneros’s Friendship on Chicana Feminist
Literature (Sara A. Ramírez)
* 11. Faxes, Friendship, and the Rise of Chicana Literature: Examining
the Archive of Letters between Sandra Cisneros and Helena María
Viramontes (Linda Margarita Greenberg)
6. Part III. ¡Adelante! Seeing and Listening with Cisneros
* 12. La Sandra como Artista: The Visual Cisneros (Tey Marianna Nunn)
* 13. Sin Vergüenza: A Plática with Sandra Cisneros (Macarena
Hernández)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
2. Preface. ¡Ay Tú! ¡Sí Yo! Nosotrxs: The Sinvergüenza Collective
3. Introduction. Her Fabulous Career: Sandra Cisneros’s Life/Work (Sonia
Saldívar-Hull and Geneva M. Gano)
4. Part I. ¡Ay, Qué Rico! Close Readings
* 1. Lingering with Complicity in Caramelo (Mary Pat Brady)
* 2. The Racial City: Navigating Chicago’s Racialized Space in The
House on Mango Street (Olga L. Herrera)
* 3. Telenovela Feeling in Sandra Cisneros’s Loose Woman: “I Think of
Me to Gluttony” (Adriana Estill)
* 4. “You Were Telling Cochinadas”: Performative Metaphors for
Storytelling in Sandra Cisneros’s Caramelo (Shanna M. Salinas)
* 5. Mapping the Decolonial: Community Cartography in Sandra Cisneros’s
Woman Hollering Creek (Teresa Hernández)
5. Part II. Love, Shame, and Sinvergüenzas
* 6. “Love the Only Way I Know How”: Cultivating Erotic Conocimiento in
the Work of Sandra Cisneros (Belinda Linn Rincón)
* 7. From Marginal to Sin Vergüenza: Overcoming School-Inflicted Shame
through Transgressive Literary Aesthetics in Sandra Cisneros’s Life
and Writing (Georgina Guzmán)
* 8. The Loose Woman and the Men of Ill Repute (Richard T. Rodríguez)
* 9. Wild, Wicked, and Crazy Brave Tongues: Locating the Collaborative
Origins of Sandra Cisneros’s and Joy Harjo’s Poetic Voices (Audrey
Goodman)
* 10. “Hay Que Inventarnos / We Must Invent Ourselves”: The Impact of
Norma Alarcón and Sandra Cisneros’s Friendship on Chicana Feminist
Literature (Sara A. Ramírez)
* 11. Faxes, Friendship, and the Rise of Chicana Literature: Examining
the Archive of Letters between Sandra Cisneros and Helena María
Viramontes (Linda Margarita Greenberg)
6. Part III. ¡Adelante! Seeing and Listening with Cisneros
* 12. La Sandra como Artista: The Visual Cisneros (Tey Marianna Nunn)
* 13. Sin Vergüenza: A Plática with Sandra Cisneros (Macarena
Hernández)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
1. List of Illustrations
2. Preface. ¡Ay Tú! ¡Sí Yo! Nosotrxs: The Sinvergüenza Collective
3. Introduction. Her Fabulous Career: Sandra Cisneros’s Life/Work (Sonia
Saldívar-Hull and Geneva M. Gano)
4. Part I. ¡Ay, Qué Rico! Close Readings
* 1. Lingering with Complicity in Caramelo (Mary Pat Brady)
* 2. The Racial City: Navigating Chicago’s Racialized Space in The
House on Mango Street (Olga L. Herrera)
* 3. Telenovela Feeling in Sandra Cisneros’s Loose Woman: “I Think of
Me to Gluttony” (Adriana Estill)
* 4. “You Were Telling Cochinadas”: Performative Metaphors for
Storytelling in Sandra Cisneros’s Caramelo (Shanna M. Salinas)
* 5. Mapping the Decolonial: Community Cartography in Sandra Cisneros’s
Woman Hollering Creek (Teresa Hernández)
5. Part II. Love, Shame, and Sinvergüenzas
* 6. “Love the Only Way I Know How”: Cultivating Erotic Conocimiento in
the Work of Sandra Cisneros (Belinda Linn Rincón)
* 7. From Marginal to Sin Vergüenza: Overcoming School-Inflicted Shame
through Transgressive Literary Aesthetics in Sandra Cisneros’s Life
and Writing (Georgina Guzmán)
* 8. The Loose Woman and the Men of Ill Repute (Richard T. Rodríguez)
* 9. Wild, Wicked, and Crazy Brave Tongues: Locating the Collaborative
Origins of Sandra Cisneros’s and Joy Harjo’s Poetic Voices (Audrey
Goodman)
* 10. “Hay Que Inventarnos / We Must Invent Ourselves”: The Impact of
Norma Alarcón and Sandra Cisneros’s Friendship on Chicana Feminist
Literature (Sara A. Ramírez)
* 11. Faxes, Friendship, and the Rise of Chicana Literature: Examining
the Archive of Letters between Sandra Cisneros and Helena María
Viramontes (Linda Margarita Greenberg)
6. Part III. ¡Adelante! Seeing and Listening with Cisneros
* 12. La Sandra como Artista: The Visual Cisneros (Tey Marianna Nunn)
* 13. Sin Vergüenza: A Plática with Sandra Cisneros (Macarena
Hernández)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index
2. Preface. ¡Ay Tú! ¡Sí Yo! Nosotrxs: The Sinvergüenza Collective
3. Introduction. Her Fabulous Career: Sandra Cisneros’s Life/Work (Sonia
Saldívar-Hull and Geneva M. Gano)
4. Part I. ¡Ay, Qué Rico! Close Readings
* 1. Lingering with Complicity in Caramelo (Mary Pat Brady)
* 2. The Racial City: Navigating Chicago’s Racialized Space in The
House on Mango Street (Olga L. Herrera)
* 3. Telenovela Feeling in Sandra Cisneros’s Loose Woman: “I Think of
Me to Gluttony” (Adriana Estill)
* 4. “You Were Telling Cochinadas”: Performative Metaphors for
Storytelling in Sandra Cisneros’s Caramelo (Shanna M. Salinas)
* 5. Mapping the Decolonial: Community Cartography in Sandra Cisneros’s
Woman Hollering Creek (Teresa Hernández)
5. Part II. Love, Shame, and Sinvergüenzas
* 6. “Love the Only Way I Know How”: Cultivating Erotic Conocimiento in
the Work of Sandra Cisneros (Belinda Linn Rincón)
* 7. From Marginal to Sin Vergüenza: Overcoming School-Inflicted Shame
through Transgressive Literary Aesthetics in Sandra Cisneros’s Life
and Writing (Georgina Guzmán)
* 8. The Loose Woman and the Men of Ill Repute (Richard T. Rodríguez)
* 9. Wild, Wicked, and Crazy Brave Tongues: Locating the Collaborative
Origins of Sandra Cisneros’s and Joy Harjo’s Poetic Voices (Audrey
Goodman)
* 10. “Hay Que Inventarnos / We Must Invent Ourselves”: The Impact of
Norma Alarcón and Sandra Cisneros’s Friendship on Chicana Feminist
Literature (Sara A. Ramírez)
* 11. Faxes, Friendship, and the Rise of Chicana Literature: Examining
the Archive of Letters between Sandra Cisneros and Helena María
Viramontes (Linda Margarita Greenberg)
6. Part III. ¡Adelante! Seeing and Listening with Cisneros
* 12. La Sandra como Artista: The Visual Cisneros (Tey Marianna Nunn)
* 13. Sin Vergüenza: A Plática with Sandra Cisneros (Macarena
Hernández)
7. Acknowledgments
8. Contributors
9. Index