Journals Log In | Journals Account Info

Books Cart  
Journals Cart  
 
 
SEARCH
  
Browse Books

Black History Month Sale
Arizona Statehood Sale
Browse Bargain Books


Recent Award Winners
Browse Bestsellers
UNP on Facebook
Jewish Publication Society

JPS

SS12 catalog

Spring/Summer 2012 e-catalog
Download PDF

María Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, 0803232349, 0-8032-3234-9, 978-0-8032-3234-1, 9780803232341, Edited by Amelia María de la Luz Montes and Anne Elizabeth Goldman, Postwestern Horizons, Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, 0803203985, 0-8032-0398-5, 978-0-8032-0398-3, 9780803203983, Edited by Amelia María de la Luz Montes and Anne Elizabeth Goldman, Postwestern Horizon

María Amparo Ruiz de Burton
Critical and Pedagogical Perspectives
Edited by Amelia María de la Luz Montes and Anne Elizabeth Goldman

hardcover
2004. 304 pp.
978-0-8032-3234-1
$35.00 s
 

Since the recent republication of her novel The Squatter and the Don, María Amparo Ruiz de Burton (1832–95) has become a key figure in the recovery of nineteenth-century Mexican American literature. An aristocratic Californiana, she championed the rights of Mexican Americans in novels, plays, and letters. Her 1885 novel called attention to the illegal appropriation of Mexican land by the United States government, and she critiqued the political mores of America after the Civil War in light of the Mexican-American war. Her keen assessment of corporate capitalism at the end of the nineteenth century, frank acknowledgment of feminine desire, and deft insights about economic realities and class relations were unique among her American peers.

Using Ruiz de Burton’s work to analyze the critical schism conventionally imposed on nineteenth-century literary culture in America, the essays in this collection also draw connections between her work and the contemporary Chicana and Chicano canons. At once richly historical and critically nuanced, these essays appraise a politically complex Mexican American writer alternately celebrated as marginalized and censured for her identification with a social elite. This volume includes a section on pedagogy that offers a discussion of teaching approaches, syllabi, discussion questions, and assignments.


Amelia María de la Luz Montes is an assistant professor of English and ethnic studies at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and a research fellow in the Latina/Latino studies program at the University of Illinois in Urbana–Champaign. Anne Elizabeth Goldman is an associate professor of English at Sonoma State University in California. She is the author of Continental Divides: Revisioning American Literature and Take My Word: Autobiographical Innovations of Ethnic American Working Women.

“Each essay. . . . offers valuable insight into Ruiz de Burton’s worlds of race, politics, and cultures. A long overdue secondary source, the anthology will prove to be an important guide to the writings of this significant American literary figure.”—Ella Maria Diaz, Legacy

“A remarkable collection.”—Maria C. Gonzalez, Western American Literature

“This anthology provides a deep and thorough analysis of Ruiz de Burton’s work from a series of multidisciplinary approaches that emphasize cross-connections among languages, genres, themes, canons, literary periods, and traditions.”—Beatriz Urraca, The Americas


Also of Interest

Unsettling the Literary West
Nathaniel Lewis


True West
William R. Handley


Postwestern Cultures
Susan Kollin


Manifest and Other Destinies
Stephanie LeMenager