• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Chicano Poetry : A Response to Chaos
  • Contributor: Bruce-Novoa, Juan [Author]
  • Published: Austin: University of Texas Press, [2021]
    [Online-Ausgabe]
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.7560/710757
  • ISBN: 9780292762350
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: American poetry - Mexican influences ; American poetry Mexican American authors History and criticism ; American poetry Mexican influences ; American poetry 20th century History and criticism ; Mexican Americans in literature ; Mexican Americans Intellectual life ; LITERARY CRITICISM / American / Hispanic American ; LITERARY CRITICISM / General
  • Type of reproduction: [Online-Ausgabe]
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: In English
    Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web
  • Description: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. RESCUING THE WORLD CENTER Montoya, Navarro, Delgado, Salinas -- 3. THE HEROICS OF SACRIFICE I Am Joaquin -- 4. THE TEACHINGS OF ALURISTA A Chicano Way of Knowledge -- 5. THE HEROICS OF SELF-LOVE Sergio Elizondo -- 6. THE VOICE OF SILENCE Miguel Mendez, Poet -- 7. TIME, DEATH, AND THE OTHER VOICE OF SILENCE Tino Villanueva -- 8. A VOICE AGAINST SILENCE Ricardo Sanchez -- 9. RITUALS OF DEVASTATION AND RESURRECTION Bernice Zamora -- 10. PATRICIDE AND RESURRECTION Gary Soto -- 11. CONCLUSION -- NOTES -- SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX

    Alurista. Gary Soto. Bernice Zamora. José Montoya. These names, luminous to some, remain unknown to those who have not yet discovered the rich variety of late twentieth century Chicano poetry. With the flowering of the Chicano Movement in the mid-1960s came not only increased political awareness for many Mexican Americans but also a body of fine creative writing. Now the major voices of Chicano literature have begun to reach the wider audience they deserve. Bruce-Novoa's Chicano Poetry: A Response to Chaos—the first booklength critical study of Chicano poetry—examines the most significant works of a body of literature that has grown dramatically in size and importance in less than two decades. Here are insightful new readings of the major writings of Abelardo Delgado, Sergio Elizondo, Rodolfo Gonzales, Miguel Méndez, J. L. Navarro, Raúl Salinas, Ricardo Sánchez, and Tino Villanueva, as well as Alurista, Soto, Zamora, and Montoya. Close textual analyses of such important works as I Am Joaquín, Restless Serpents, and Floricanto en Aztlán enrich and deepen our understanding of their imagery, themes, structure, and meaning. Bruce-Novoa argues that Chicano poetry responds to the threat of loss, whether of hero, barrio, family, or tradition. Thus José Montoya elegizes a dead Pachuco in "El Louie," and Raúl Salinas laments the disappearance of a barrio in "A Trip through the Mind Jail." But this elegy at the heart of Chicano poetry is both lament and celebration, for it expresses the group's continuing vitality and strength. Common to twentieth-century poetry is the preoccupation with time, death, and alienation, and the work of Chicano poets—sometimes seen as outside the traditions of world literature—shares these concerns. Bruce-Novoa brilliantly defines both the unique and the universal in Chicano poetry
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