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2006 | 29/30 | 236-247

Article title

The City as a Place of Dialogue, Negotiation and Struggle in Terri de la Peña and Mona Ruiz

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The multicultural city is a popular setting of many Chicana narratives and short stories. However, in many contemporary works by Chicana authors it loses its typical function of providing a background to the story solely and becomes an active agent that reflects the struggles of its inhabitants. This negotiation is also seen in the interplay between the barrio and the city that is depicted in Chicana literature. This depiction of the city as a place of dialogue, negotiation and struggle against conformity is especially interesting in the two works by two Chicana authors – The Faults by Terri de la Peña and Two Badges: The Lives of Mona Ruiz by Mona Ruiz. Terri de la Peña makes L.A. an arena of fight against sexual conformity, male violence, and against conforming to restricting social norms. Ruiz, on the other hand, concentrates on the relation between the barrio and the city. In her personal story she presents different aspects of non-conformity, which is especially visible in the transformation of her own life, (namely her passage from a gang member to a policewoman in Santa Ana) and her struggle not to conform in both situations. The aspect of dialogue and negotiation is emphasized in both books at the linguistic level, as well, as both authors use code-switching. The purpose of my paper is to compare the two works and analyze the portrait of a contemporary multicultural city that emerges from these books, concentrating on the aspect of the city as a place of (non)conformity in terms of gender, ethnicity, sexuality and class.

Keywords

Contributors

author
  • Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Lublin, Poland

References

  • Augustine, J. (1993): From Topos to Anthropoid: The City as Character in Twentieth-Century Texts. In M. A. Caws (ed.), City Images: Perspectives from Literature, Philosophy, and Film. Pennsylvania: Gordon and Breach.
  • Clarke, S. (2001): American Cities at the Millennium. In H. Krabbendam, M. Roholl, and T. de Vries (eds.), The American Metropolis: Image and Inspiration. Amsterdam: VU University Press.
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  • Davis, M. (1992): City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles. New York: Vintage Books.
  • Fregoso, R. L. (2003): Mexicana Encounters: the Making of Social Identities on the Borderlands. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Gilfoyle, T. J. (2001): United States Urban History: Theoretical Graveyard or Interpretative Paradise? In H. Krabbendam, M. Roholl, and T. de Vries (eds.), The American Metropolis: Image and Inspiration. Amsterdam: VU University Press.
  • Lehan, R. (1998): The City in Literature: An Intellectual and Cultural History. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Miranda, M. A. (2000): Subversive Geographies: From Representations of Girls in Gangs to Self-presentation as Civil Subjects. Santa Cruz: University of California.
  • Peña, T. de la (1999): Faults. A Novel. Los Angeles: Alyson Books.
  • Ramírez, C. S. (2000): Crimes of Fashion. The Pachuca in Chicana/o Art, Literature and History: Reexamining Nation, Cultural Nationalism and Resistance.
  • Ruiz, M. and G. Boucher (1997): Two Badges: the Lives of Mona Ruiz. Houston: Arte Público Press.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-12026a9a-63bb-4447-990d-eb6be3b3da94
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