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Détails
Format – détails additionnels: | Print version: Anzaldua, Gloria. This bridge we call home : radical visions for transformation. London : Taylor and Francis, ©1996 |
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Type d’ouvrage: | Document |
Type de document: | Livre, Fichier d'ordinateur |
Tous les auteurs / collaborateurs: | Gloria Anzaldúa; AnaLouise Keating |
ISBN: | 9781135351526 113535152X |
Numéro OCLC: | 956688471 |
Notes: | 40. Yo' Done Bridge Is Fallin' Down. |
Description: | 1 online resource (623 pages) |
Contenu: | Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Giving Thanks -- Preface (Un)natural bridges, (Un)safe spaces -- Charting Pathways, Marking Thresholds ... A Warning, An Introduction -- Foreword AfterBridge: Technologies of Crossing -- i. "looking for my own bridge to get over" ... exploring the impact -- 1. Open the Door -- 2. Chameleon -- 3. Del puente al arco iris: transformando de guerrera a mujer de la paz-From Bridge to Rainbow: Transforming from Warrior to Woman of Peace -- 4. Nacido en un Puente/Born on a Bridge. 5. Engaging Contradictions, Creating Home ... Three Letters -- 6. Bridges/Backs/Books: A Love Letter to the Editors -- 7. Bridging Different Views: Australian and Asia-Pacific Engagements with This Bridge Called My Back -- 8. Thinking Again: This Bridge Called My Back and the Challenge to Whiteness -- 9. The Spirit of This Bridge -- 10. Remembering This Bridge, Remembering Ourselves: Yearning, Memory, and Desire -- 11. Seventh Fire -- ii. "still struggling with the boxes people try to put me in" ... resisting the labels -- 12. Interracial -- 13. Los Intersticios: Recasting Moving Selves. 14. Gallina Ciega: Turning the Game on Itself -- 15. QUE ONDA MOTHER GOOSE: THE REAL NURSERY RHYME FROM EL BARRIO -- 16. The Hipness of Mediation: A Hyphenated German Existence -- 17. Living Fearlessly With and Within Differences: My Search for Identity Beyond Categories and Contradictions -- 18. A Letter to a Mother, from Her Son -- 19. Young Man Popkin: A Queer Dystopia -- 20. Transchildren, Changelings, and Fairies: Living the Dream and Surviving the Nightmare in Contemporary America -- 21. The Real Americana -- 22. Shades of a Bridge's Breath. 23. Nomadic Existence: Exile, Gender, and Palestine (an E-mail Conversation between Sisters) -- 24. (Re)Writing Home: A Daughter's Letter to Her Mother -- 25. IN THE END (AL FIN) WE ARE ALL CHICANAS (SOMOS TODOS CHICANAS): pivotal positions for change -- iii. "locking arms in the master's house" ... omissions, revisions, new issues -- 26. Burning House -- 27. "What's Wrong with a Little Fantasy?" Storytelling from the (Still) Ivory Tower -- 28. Footnoting Heresy: E-mail Dialogues -- 29. Memory and the New-Born: The Maternal Imagination in Diaspora. 30. The "White" Sheep of the Family: But Bleaching Is like Starvation -- 31. Lesbianism, 2000 -- 32. "Now That You're a White Man": Changing Sex in a Postmodern World-Being, Becoming, and Borders -- 33. Poets, Lovers, and the Master's Tools: A Conversation with Audre Lorde -- 34. "All I Can Cook Is Crack on a Spoon": A Sign for a New Generation of Feminists -- 35. DON'T TOUCH: RECUERDOS (SELF-DESTRUCTION) -- 36. Premature -- 37. The Reckoning -- iv. "a place at the table" ... surviving the battles, shaping our worlds -- 38. Puente del Fuego -- 39. Vanish Is a Toilet Bowl Cleaner. |
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Critiques
Synopsis de l’éditeur
"Reading this bridge we call home, which has more than 80 contributors, is like attending a late-night party with every noteworthy activist, professor, and artist you've ever met. The lives out its subtitle; it's hard to walk away from reading it without feeling changed." -- Bitch"Readers interested in feminism and multiculturalism will appreciate the variety of contributors and viewpoints." -- Booklist"this bridge we call home is a book that, like its predecessor, turns our ideas upside down, revisits the battlegrounds of identity politics, and pushes us to ask hard questions about ourselves and our communities...Anzaldua and Keating have created a daring collection." -- Daisy Hernandez, coeditor, Colonize This!Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism"From shouldering the traumas and dramas of life in the most powerful country in the world, the U.S., toward the creation of a different world--a sort of us/then and us/now--this bridge we call home is a step in gathering up and documenting our best thoughts about collected, difficult experiences. Diversity, difference, underlying pain, and gain, are revealed, spoken, and still, as in an earlier bridge, with a hope about speaking with the mainstream, the malestream, as well as the many more outside of either. An accomplishment, a brave, collaborative model for understanding the importance of both collected and collective experience." -- Deena J. Gonzalez, Chair, Dept. of Chicana/o Studies, Loyola Marymount Univ., Los Angeles and author of Refusing theFavor: The Spanish-Mexican Women of Santa Fe, 1820-1880"If you're ready for some serious fare by some of the best women of color writers working today, this is a collection for you." -- Curve"this bridge we call home is a continuation of the voices, thoughts, and imagings found in the first book and an addition of issues that have only recently come to light. It is a work that encourages all of us to envision new ways of seeing, new ways of doing, and new ways of thikning about that which surrounds us every day. I found it well written, enthralling, and very motivating. A masterpiece that is sure to influence our lives for years to come." -- Altar Magazine Lire la suite...