Angeles Mastretta PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download Angeles Mastretta PDF full book. Access full book title Angeles Mastretta.

Women with Big Eyes

Women with Big Eyes
Author: Angeles Mastretta
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2004-11-02
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1594480400

Download Women with Big Eyes Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The award winning author of Tear This Heart Out writes a compilation of deeply personal stories imbued with the human spirit, driven by different powerful women connected by desire. Each story in this "remarkable collection" (Kirkus Reviews) reveals a different woman, yet all are linked by a single thread: the strength of desire. Vibrant, sly, wise, earthy, and full of life, these are stories that mesmerize.


Angeles Mastretta

Angeles Mastretta
Author: Jane Elizabeth Lavery
Publisher: Tamesis Books
Total Pages: 278
Release: 2005
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781855661172

Download Angeles Mastretta Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The first major study on the works of the Mexican novelist, Angeles Mastretta, demonstrating the rich complexity and range of the author's fiction and essays. The Mexican novelist, Angeles Mastretta [b. 1949], has only recently received serious critical attention largely because her work has been seen as 'popular' and therefore inappropriate for academic study. This first major work tobe published on Mastretta seeks to demonstrate the rich complexity and range of the author's fiction and essays. In the tradition of Post-Boom Latin American women's writing, Mastretta's texts are motivated by a desire to speak primarily of the silenced experiences and voices of women. Two of her novels, referential and testimonial in style, can be placed within the Mexican Revolutionary Novel tradition and explore the Revolutionary period and its consequences in the light of female experiences and perspectives. The hitherto unexplored themes of female sexuality and bodily erotics in Mastretta's texts are also considered in this volume. Her feminist works avoid facile simplifications: heterogeneous and dialogical, they interweave the historical and the fictional, the everyday and the fantastic. The originality of Mastretta's writing lies in its elusive postmodern ambiguities: shimmering surfacesare often interrupted by unexpected depths and proliferating meanings cannot be fully circumscribed by critical analysis. Jane Elizabeth Lavery lectures in Latin American Studies at the University of Kent.


Tear This Heart Out

Tear This Heart Out
Author: Angeles Mastretta
Publisher: Turtleback
Total Pages:
Release: 1997-01
Genre:
ISBN: 9780613656320

Download Tear This Heart Out Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

A love story set in the years after the Mexican revolution.


Mexican Bolero

Mexican Bolero
Author: Angeles Mastretta
Publisher: Penguin Mass Market
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1991
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Download Mexican Bolero Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


Lovesick

Lovesick
Author: Angeles Mastretta
Publisher:
Total Pages: 292
Release: 1998
Genre: Mexico
ISBN: 9780099779612

Download Lovesick Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Emilia Sauir is the daughter of a Spanish mother and Mayan herbalist father. In the midst of the hardships of the Mexican rebellions of the early-20th-century, Emilia is torn between her love for two men: a childhood friend who runs off to fight, and a peace-loving doctor.


The Boom Femenino in Mexico

The Boom Femenino in Mexico
Author: Nuala Finnegan
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2010-04-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1443821810

Download The Boom Femenino in Mexico Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The Boom Femenino in Mexico: Reading Contemporary Women’s Writing is a collection of essays that focuses on literary production by women in Mexico over the last three decades. In its exploration of the boom femenino phenomenon, the book traces the history of the earlier boom in Latin American culture and investigates the implications of the use of the same term in the context of contemporary women’s writing from Mexico. In this way it engages critically with the cultural, historical and literary significance of the term illuminating the concept for a wide range of readers. It is clear that the entry of so many women writers into an arena traditionally reserved for men has prompted discussion around concepts such as ‘women’s writing’ and the very definition of ‘literature’ itself. Many of the contributors grapple with the theoretical tensions that such debates provoke offering an important opportunity to think critically about the texts produced during this period and the ways in which they have impacted on the Mexican and international cultural spheres. The project is comprehensive in its scope and, for the first time, brings together scholars from Mexico, the U.S. and Europe in a transnational forum. The book posits that despite certain aesthetic and thematic commonalities, the increased output by women writers in Mexico cannot be appraised as a unified literary movement. Instead it embraces a wide range of different generic forms and the subjects under study in the essays in the book include the best-selling work of Ángeles Mastretta, Elena Poniatowska and Laura Esquivel as well as the social and political preoccupations of journalists, Rosanna Reguillo and Cristina Pacheco. Contributors offer readings of the aesthetic visions of writers as diverse as Carmen Boullosa, Ana García Bergua, and Eve Gil while other essays examine the nuances of contemporary gender identity in the work of Ana Clavel, Sabina Berman, Brianda Domecq and María Luisa Puga. There are essays devoted to poetry by indigenous Mayan women and an analysis of the complex place of poetry within the broader framework of literary production. The problems that emerge as a result of literary cataloguing based on gender politics are also considered at length in a number of essays that take a panoramic view of literary production over the period. Various critical approaches are employed throughout and the collection as a whole demonstrates that academic interest in Mexican women’s writing of the boom femenio is thriving. Above all, the essays here provide a space in which the location of women within prevailing cultural paradigms in Mexico and their role in the mapping of power in evolving textual canons may be interrogated. It is clear from the collection that interest in such issues is still alive and that the debate is far from over.


Women with Big Eyes

Women with Big Eyes
Author: Angeles Mastretta
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2004-11-02
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1594480400

Download Women with Big Eyes Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The award winning author of Tear This Heart Out writes a compilation of deeply personal stories imbued with the human spirit, driven by different powerful women connected by desire. Each story in this "remarkable collection" (Kirkus Reviews) reveals a different woman, yet all are linked by a single thread: the strength of desire. Vibrant, sly, wise, earthy, and full of life, these are stories that mesmerize.


Ambivalence, Modernity, Power

Ambivalence, Modernity, Power
Author: Nuala Finnegan
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 346
Release: 2007
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9783039105076

Download Ambivalence, Modernity, Power Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

By incorporating a variety of critical approaches within a feminist framework, the author here argues that Mexican women writers participate in a crucial project of unsettling dominant discourses as they strive for new ways of capturing the ambivalent position of the Mexican women in their texts.


A ́ngeles Mastretta

A ́ngeles Mastretta
Author: Jane Elizabeth Lavery
Publisher: Tamesis Books
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2005-12-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781846153662

Download A ́ngeles Mastretta Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The Mexican novelist, Angeles Mastretta (b. 1949), has only recently received serious critical attention largely because her work has been seen as 'popular' and therefore inappropriate for academic study. This first major work to be published on Mastretta seeks to demonstrate the rich complexity and range of the author's fiction and essays. In the tradition of Post-Boom Latin American women's writing, Mastretta's texts are motivated by a desire to speak primarily of the silenced experiences and voices of women. Two of her novels, referential and testimonial in style, can be placed within the Mexican Revolutionary Novel tradition and explore the Revolutionary period and its consequences in the light of female experiences and perspectives. The hitherto unexplored themes of female sexuality and bodily erotics in Mastretta's texts are also considered in this volume. Her feminist works avoid facile simplifications: heterogeneous and dialogical, they interweave the historical and the fictional, the everyday and the fantastic. The originality of Mastretta's writing lies in its elusive postmodern ambiguities: shimmering surfaces are often interrupted by unexpected depths and proliferating meanings cannot be fully circumscribed by critical analysis. Jane Elizabeth Lavery lectures in Latin American Studies at the University of Kent.