Authors: Ana Castillo
ISBN-13: 9780452274242, ISBN-10: 0452274249
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: September 1995
Edition: (Non-applicable)
The "I" in these critical essays by novelist, poet, scholar, and activist/curandera Ana Castillo is that of the Mexic-Amerindian woman living in the United States. The essays are addressed to everyone interested in the roots of the colonized woman's reality. Castillo introduces the term Xicanisma in a passionate call for a politically active, socially committed Chicana feminism. In "A Countryless Woman," Castillo outlines the experience of the brown woman in a racist society that recognizes race relations mostly as a black and white dilemma. Essays on the Watsonville strike, the early Chicano movement, and the roots of machismo illustrate the extent to which women still struggle against male dominance. Other essays suggest strategies for opposing the suppression of women's spirituality and sexuality by institutionalized religion and the state. These challenging essays will be a provocative guide for those who envision a new future for women as we face a new century.
Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
1 | A Countryless Woman: The Early Feminista | 21 |
2 | The 1986 Watsonville Women's Strike: A Case of Mexicana Activism | 43 |
3 | The Ancient Roots of Machismo | 63 |
4 | Saintly Mother and Soldier's Whore: The Leftist/Catholic Paradigm | 85 |
5 | In the Beginning There Was Eva | 105 |
6 | La Macha: Toward an Erotic Whole Self | 121 |
7 | Brujas and Curanderas: A Lived Spirituality | 145 |
8 | Un Tapiz: Poetics of Conscientizacion | 163 |
9 | Toward the Mother-Bond Principle | 181 |
10 | Resurrection of the Dreamers | 205 |
Notes | 227 |