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Triangulations by David J. Vazquez

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Triangulations

Narrative Strategies for Navigating Latino Identity

David J. Vazquez, David J. Vázquez

University of Minnesota Press · Print & ebook · September 1, 2011

Reading lane: Hispanic American Literary Criticism

Just as mariners use triangulation, mapping an imaginary triangle between two known positions and an unknown location, so, David J.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Hispanic American Literary Criticism and Caribbean & Latin American.Publisher: University of Minnesota Press.

Book Details

Authors
David J. Vazquez, David J. Vázquez
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Published
September 1, 2011
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Hispanic American Literary Criticism · Literary Criticism / Caribbean & Latin American
Reading lane
Hispanic American Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Hispanic American Literary Criticism

  • Hispanic American Studies

About This Book

Just as mariners use triangulation, mapping an imaginary triangle between two known positions and an unknown location, so, David J. Vázquez contends, Latino authors in late twentieth-century America employ the coordinates of familiar ideas of self to find their way to new, complex identities. Through this metaphor, Vázquez reveals how Latino autobiographical texts, written after the rise of cultural nationalism in the 1960s, challenge mainstream notions of individual identit...

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Just as mariners use triangulation, mapping an imaginary triangle between two known positions and an unknown location, so, David J. Vázquez contends, Latino authors in late twentieth-century America employ the coordinates of familiar ideas of self to find their way to new, complex identities. Through this metaphor, Vázquez reveals how Latino autobiographical texts, written after the rise of cultural nationalism in the 1960s, challenge mainstream notions of individual identity and national belonging in the United States. In a traditional autobiographical work, the protagonist frequently opts out of his or her community. In the works that Vázquez analyzes in Triangulations , protagonists instead opt in to collective groups—often for the express political purpose of redefining that collective. Reading texts by authors such as Ernesto Galarza, Jesús Colón, Piri Thomas, Oscar “Zeta” Acosta, Judith Ortiz Cofer, John Rechy, Julia Alvarez, and Sandra Cisneros, Vázquez engages debates about the relationship between literature and social movements, the role of cultural nationalism in projects for social justice, the gender and sexual problematics of 1960s cultural nationalist groups, the possibilities for interethnic coalitions, and the interpretation of autobiography. In the process, Triangulations considers the potential for cultural nationalism as a productive force for aggrieved communities of color in their struggles for equality.

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