Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Jul 4, 2018 · Gloria Anzaldúa believed that borders were much more than physical boundaries: They were spiritual, psychological and even sexual. The Mexican-American writer called it 'una herida abierta': an open wound.

    • gloria borders books in chronological1
    • gloria borders books in chronological2
    • gloria borders books in chronological3
    • gloria borders books in chronological4
    • gloria borders books in chronological5
  2. Oct 19, 2017 · Thirty years ago, Chicana feminist Gloria Anzaldúa helped make it cultural... even mythological, with the publication of her book "Borderlands La Frontera: The New Mestiza." It opened the eyes...

    • Analysis
    • Contents
    • Synopsis
    • Themes
    • Language
    • Quotes
    • Writing
    • Premise
    • Reviews

    Gloria Anzaldúa, the author of this book, is attempting to define the New Mestiza throughout its contents, and does so by examining herself, her land, and her language. The dictionary definition of a mestiza is a [woman] of mixed parentage, especially the offspring of a Spanish American and an American Indian. The borderlands Anzaldúa comes from in...

    Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 The next chapter discusses the duality of life and death. Anzaldúa discusses ideas of duality in her own life, and how her experience of being an alien in her own culture represents these ideas. The duality is expressed in wanting to be one with her culture but being uncomfortable inside of the culture. Chapt...

    In the first chapter of the book, Anzaldúa describes her homeland, the border that separates the safe from the unsafe, and us from them (25). Those in power, the rich whites, live to the north and look down upon the half-breed and queer. This border is the white mans way to keep himself from harm and to keep himself safe from the mixed-culture peop...

    Next, Anzaldúa explores her homosexuality and male/female identity. She discusses how, being raised Catholic, she made the choice to be homosexual. She recognizes that in some people it is genetically inherent and understood. She is said to make the choice because in Catholic belief, homosexuality is a choice, and nobody is created that way. She co...

    A lot of Chicanos identify their language with their home. Their language is closer to home than the Southwest itself is, for some. They speak a combination of several languages. Anzaldúa lists several that she uses: All of these languages make up Anzaldúa's Spanglish language. She considers some of these languages her home languages, in which she ...

    Until a person accepts the legitimacy of their own language, they wont accept the legitimacy of their own self and culture. One cant accept oneself until one has accepted her own language, because language is vital to worldview and ways of thinking and doing.

    She continues to discuss how the borderlands create unease between cultures and ideas, and how this unease and unbalance creates a need to write. The duality of it is just like how the writing process is a process of both sickness and health, both a willingness to write and an anxiety to write. There is a dual feeling to all of these ideas and they...

    Anzaldúa claims that she and her people have not melted into the American pot, but have rather come together into a separate group of Americans. She knows that someday her people will be a real ethnicity with real culture like it has been in the past. That day will come again.

    All in all, this is a wonderful look into the whole being of a borderlander. It shows how the mental borderlands, as well as the physical, are lands of a constant struggle for identity. She shows how the border pulls people to be something new. It pulls them to be something original. And at the same time, it pulls them to stick to the traditions. T...

  3. Nov 3, 2023 · Borderlands / La Frontera is a 1987 work of memoir, critical theory, and poetry that explores Chicano culture and identity from a queer feminist perspective. Gloria Anzaldúa recounts the...

  4. Oct 19, 2017 · Thirty years ago, Chicana feminist Gloria Anzaldúa, helped make it cultural...even mythological, with the publication of her book "Borderlands La Frontera: The New Mestiza".

  5. Apr 7, 2022 · Bridging borders by providing a paradigm of shifting and multiple identities, the book articulates what Anzaldúa calls mestiza consciousness, an identity characterized by hybridity and plurality.

  6. People also ask

  7. In 1987, Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera offered a radical reimagining of the borderlands as a physical and metaphorical space, forcing scholars inside and outside of the academy to consider how sex and gender structured power relations and historically shaped struggles for dignity and survival.