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Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties

Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties
Author: Felicia Luna Lemus
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 262
Release: 2003-09-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0374278563

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This fiction debut is "a warm tale of 'princess dyke' life in L.A. What they lack in resources, they make up for in their celebration of familia, love and unapologetic sexual configurations" (Ana Castillo).


Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties

Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties
Author: Felicia Luna Lemus
Publisher: Seal Press
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2004-08-26
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781580051262

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Leticia Marisol Estrella Torez, a young Latina, heads north to escape her past and change her fortunes but nevertheless returns to the powerful pull of la familia. Reprint.


Like Son

Like Son
Author: Felicia Luna Lemus
Publisher: Akashic Books
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2007-04-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1617750530

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An “exuberant [and] smart” novel of love, family, the fluidity of identity, and the mysteries of the past (Publishers Weekly). Set amid the outsider worlds of twenty-first century downtown New York, 1990s Los Angeles, and 1940s Mexico City, Like Son is the not-so-simple story of a love-blindness shared between a father and a son. Born a bouncing baby girl named Francisca Cruz, Frank Cruz is now a post-punk thirty-year-old who has inherited his dead father’s wanderlust, unrequited love, and hyperbolic tendencies. From the author ofTrace Elements of Random Tea Parties, this is a “powerfully written chronicle of love, in which gender is irrelevant, and the siren call of the past threatens the present” (Booklist). “Frank Cruz—born as a girl named Francisca, but living and identifying as a man—is a loner from Southern California. His father, diagnosed with terminal cancer, offers Frank tragic stories of the Cruz family, a key to a safe deposit box and an arresting 1924 photograph of a beautiful woman named Nahui Olin, a bohemian Mexican artist/poet from an aristocratic background. Frank (who narrates) learns that Nahui had many lovers, lived transgressively and was endlessly wooed. When his father dies, Frank sets off for New York and lands in the East Village, where he meets and falls in love with Nathalie; she eerily reminds him of Nahui, whose face and history have now obsessed him. Their relationship is solid until the horror of September 11 throws them into chaos and sadness that tests their relationship, and Frank’s self-image. With her blunt prose, Lemus doesn't waste a word in this smart, never sentimental identity novel.” —Publishers Weekly


Out

Out
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 154
Release: 2003-09
Genre:
ISBN:

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Out is a fashion, style, celebrity and opinion magazine for the modern gay man.


Particulate Matter

Particulate Matter
Author: Felicia Luna Lemus
Publisher: Akashic Books
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2020-11-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1617758728

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In concise and distilled prose, Lemus presents a collection of still lifes, landscapes, and portraits of a challenging year that threatened all she loved most. “A love story that’s profoundly rooted in the emotional, geographical, and sociopolitical terrain of today . . . Like song lyrics or snapshots, her wisps and fragments of language take on a coded and otherworldly atmosphere, one that conveys wonder and dread almost subliminally . . . Particulate Matter is a moving example of how to write about climate change, not didactically, but with the deep impact of both personal loss and literary elegance.” —NPR Books “A tiny, powerful flame of a book. Lemus’ writing lands like sparks and ash, fragmented and tinged with grief . . . Particulate Matter is . . . an exploration of the simultaneity of delight, yearning, grief and confusion of being in love with a person and a place. Of being alive at all.” —San Francisco Chronicle Particulate Matter is the story of a year in Felicia Luna Lemus’s marriage when the world turned upside down. It’s set in Los Angeles, and it’s about love and crisis, loss and grief, the city and the ocean, ancestral ghosts and history haunting. Nature herself seemed to howl. Fires raged and covered the house Lemus and her spouse shared in ash. Everything crystallized. It was the most challenging and terrifying time she had ever experienced, and yet it was also a time when the sublime beauty of the everyday shone through with particular power and presence.


"I Wanted My Tiara, Damn It"

Author: Julia Faith Foshee Traylor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

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This paper traces La Llorona's evolution from ancient Aztec cosmology to Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties, a contemporary novel by Felicia Luna Lemus. I argue that the protagonist's entrenchment in her own Llorona myth ultimately inhibits the development of a queer community in collaboration with the community of her birth. While Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties leaves the tension between familial duty and personal desire unresolved, the constant narrative oscillation between past tea parties with Leti's grandmothers and present tea parties with Leti's chosen lesbian familia opens a space for new kinship structures to emerge, remapping the contours of the Mexican-American family and a woman's role within it.


Lengua Fresca

Lengua Fresca
Author: Harold Augenbraum
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2006
Genre:
ISBN: 9780618656707

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Post-Borderlandia

Post-Borderlandia
Author: T. Jackie Cuevas
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Total Pages: 189
Release: 2018-03-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0813594561

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Bringing Chicana/o studies into conversation with queer theory and transgender studies, Post-Borderlandia examines why gender variance is such a core theme in contemporary Chicana and Chicanx narratives. It considers how Chicana butch lesbians and Chicanx trans people are not only challenging heteropatriarchal norms, but also departing from mainstream conceptions of queerness and gender identification. Expanding on Gloria Anzaldúa’s classic formulation of the Chicana as transformer of the “borderlands,” Jackie Cuevas explores how a new generation of Chicanx writers, performers, and filmmakers are imagining a “post-borderlands” subjectivity, where shifting national, racial, class, sexual, and gender identifications produce complex power dynamics. In addition, Cuevas offers fresh archival analysis of the Chicana feminist canon to reveal how queer gender variance has always been crucial to this literary tradition.


Fictions of Western American Domesticity

Fictions of Western American Domesticity
Author: Amanda Jane Zink
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2018
Genre: American literature
ISBN: 0826359183

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This work provides a compelling explanation of something that has bedeviled a number of feminist scholars: Why did popular authors like Edna Ferber continue to write conventional fiction while living lives that were far from conventional? Amanda J. Zink argues that white writers like Ferber and Willa Cather avoided the subject of their own domestic labor by writing about the performance of domestic labor by "others," showing that American print culture, both in novels and through advertisements, moved away from portraying women as angels in the house and instead sought to persuade other women to be angels in their houses. Zink further explores lesser-known works such as Mexican American cookbooks and essays in Indian boarding school magazines to show how women writers "dialoging domesticity" exemplify the cross-cultural encounters between "colonial domesticity" and "sovereign domesticity." By situating these interpretations of literature within their historical contexts, Zink shows how these writers championed and challenged the ideology of domesticity.