Font Size: a A A

Splitting Aztlan: American resistance and Chicana visions of a radical utopia

Posted on:2012-02-26Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Southern CaliforniaCandidate:Perez, AnnemarieFull Text:PDF
GTID:1465390011467424Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
My dissertation researches American resistance movements, focusing on nineteenth-century Transcendentalism and the Chicano/a movements of the 1960s through 1990s. It is concerned specifically with the emergence of Chicano/a literature from the late nineteenth century through the twentieth century, especially Chicana authorship and editorship as part of a tradition of U.S. resistance literature.;The 1960s was a period of renewed interest in the literature of American Transcendentalist communities, especially the writings of David Henry Thoreau regarding resistance and civil disobedience. This re-reading shaped and informed American civil protest literature of the 1960s, including that of the Chicano Movement. Reverberations connect the two periods in the area of non-violent social protest. Further resonances may be heard now between the nineteenth-century suffrage and abolitionist movements and the 1960s civil rights and anti-war movements, as they questioned the United States' role as an imperial nation---a role begun with the nineteenth-century policy of Manifest Destiny.;The replication of and discursive focus on nation and universalized communities of men, opened space for women as editors and authors. Chicana writers and editors of the late twentieth century, like the protofeminists of the nineteenth-century suffrage movement, split the single "divine soul" by pointing out the contradictions and flaws in a discourse on the nation which presumes only masculine subjects. Both ultimately created textual communities as sites for feminist, cosmopoetic and cosmopolitical interventions. At the same time, like African American feminists of the same period, they resisted the essentialist and universalizing feminist gaze, creating out of this a U.S. differential feminism of color.;The opening section of my dissertation, comprising the first two chapters, is an introductory discussion of textual communities and resistance literature, focusing on both United States Transcendentalism and the emergence of Chicana feminist authors and editors. Chapter Two is a reading of Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton's 1872 text, Who Would Have Thought It?, as both a satire of United States northeastern culture and politics, and a statement of resistance to Manifest Destiny. Ruiz de Burton's work resists the westward gaze of northeastern U.S. literature, instead looking east from western / Californian eyes, specifically at the New England northeast. A satire, the novel was explicitly written to resist the author's sense of cultural annihilation, against both the Californios' sense of their own invisibility and the larger national policy of Manifest Destiny.;The second section of my dissertation, comprising Chapters Three and Four, looks at the emergence of Chicana authorship and editorship during the Chicano civil rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Chapter Three examines late twentieth-century Chicana authorship and editorship, using close textual readings from diverse archival sources, including the Chicano newspaper El Grito del Norte and its collective of writers and editors, especially Elizabeth Martinez and Enriqueta Vasquez, to explore the evolution of Chicana editorship and the development of textual communities within and around the developing mythology of Aztlan. Chapter Four focuses on Chicana feminist writers and editors in the 1980s, especially Cherrie Moraga and Gloria Anzaldua. The two used their anthology, This Bridge Called My Back, for a similar purpose, creating a textual community / collective of writers which participated in the project of developing and defining a specific new feminism by women of color, as well as Anzaldua's border theory. This research examines and participates in the discussion of emergent writing and editorship by women of color, and how these feminists fit into the larger tradition of textual communities in the United States.;The dissertation concludes with a re-examination of Aztlan as a site of resistance, a borderland cosmopolitan and cosmopoetic space. While "cosmopolitan" traditionally speaks of urban sensibilities, recent scholarship on the modern and postmodern evolution of cosmopolitanism offers a new and renewed vision that utilizes pre-Kantian cosmopolitanism. This vision imagines a world city space and citizenship which exists outside the confines of borders, while also tempering the effects of globalism; a space which acts against the confines of nationalism and outside the power of the state. This new type of cosmopolitanism has been named "borderland cosmopolitanism," one which exists at rural crossroads as well as in cities; it is a cosmopolitanism of the indigenous as well as the elite. Borderland cosmopolitanism does not just attack the nation; it also destabilizes citizenship and, in doing so, endangers the authority of the state and nation.
Keywords/Search Tags:Resistance, American, Chicana, 1960s, Aztlan, Textual communities, Movements, Nineteenth-century
Related items