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Julia Alvarez : writing a new place on the map / Kelli Lyon Johnson.

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Van Pelt Library PS3551.L845 Z74 2005
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Johnson, Kelli Lyon, 1969-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Alvarez, Julia--Criticism and interpretation.
Alvarez, Julia.
Women and literature--United States--History--20th century.
Women and literature.
Criticism and interpretation.
United States.
History.
Dominican Republic--In literature.
Dominican Republic.
Dominican Americans in literature.
Immigrants in literature.
Physical Description:
xix, 180 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, 2005.
Summary:
This Book Provides the first book-length examination of the writings of Julia Alvarez, the author of How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents and nearly a dozen other books of fiction and non-fiction and one of today's most widely read Latina writers. Kelli Lyon Johnson perceptively illuminates the themes, ideals, and passions that unite these diverse and rich works, all of which explore issues of understanding and representing identity within a global society.
Forced by political oppression to leave the Dominican Republic when still young, Alvarez has lived most of her adult life in the United States. Johnson argues that through her narratives, poetry, and essays, Alvarez has sought to create "a cartography of identity in exile." Alvarez inscribes a geography of identity in her work that joins theory and narrative across multiple genres to create a new map of identity and culture.
By asserting that she is "mapping a country that's not on the map," Alvarez places creativity and multiplicity at the center of this emerging cartography of identity. Rather than elaborating a "hybrid" identity that surreptitiously erases distinctions and difference, Alvarez embraces the mestizaje or mixture and accumulation of identities, experience, and diversity. To Alvarez, linguistic and cultural multiplicity represents the reality of what it means to be American, and she offers a compelling vision of both self and community in which the homeland Alvarez seeks is the narrative space of her own writings. As Johnson shows, Alvarez will continue to shape American literature by stretching the literary cartography of identity and of the Americas.
Contents:
Introduction: Mapping a new country
The paradox of remembered space
Asymptosy, gender, and exile
English as a homeland: language, creativity, and improvisation
Silence on the island: recovering collective memory
Crossing borders and writing Mestizaje: negotiating genre and gender
Magical thinking: syncretism, spirituality, and stories
Improvising new maps.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 163-176) and index.
ISBN:
0826336515
OCLC:
59360313

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