In this paper, the author interrogates the troubling effects of immigration on Diaz’s model of machismo and how both men and women react as victims. Hyper-masculine histories infiltrate everyday life for Latino people in Diaz’s work, and by exploring these interrelated short stories that illustrate the toxic effects of traditional macho identity, the author offers a critique to the macho script that complicates the process of immigration for Latinos in a social and familial platform
This Master thesis focuses on the dynamic of the development and rethinking of the concept of the tr...
A casual look at contemporary Latin American fiction, and its accompanying body of criticism, eviden...
This article sets out to stimulate discussion on the sociological value of fiction in the wider stud...
© 2019 Ruth Mahalia McHugh-DillonThis thesis analyses how Junot Diaz’s fiction “takes on” the legaci...
In the United States, where equality is preached, a severe inequality can still be seen in the treat...
In his most recent collection of short stories, This is How You Lose Her, Pulitzer Prize winner Juno...
Long considered a pervasive value of Latino cultures both south and north of the US border, machismo...
This article analyzes the interconnections between masculinity and migration in the work Hemos perdi...
The recent trend of Dominican migration to the United States echoes previous patterns of Hispanic mi...
This article uses critical discourse on the genre of literary journalism to conceptualize machismo a...
The ideas of Mexican Machismo have been crystallized in the image of the Macho, a virile man who rep...
The Dominican Republic has a long history of oppression and colonization beginning with the arrival ...
Junot Diaz\u27s Pulitzer-Prize-Winning 2007 novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao explores Domi...
This paper aims to elucidate the dyadic concepts of machismo and marianismo in Latinx culture, espec...
Junot Diaz’s Pulitzer-Prize-Winning 2007 novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao explores Dominic...
This Master thesis focuses on the dynamic of the development and rethinking of the concept of the tr...
A casual look at contemporary Latin American fiction, and its accompanying body of criticism, eviden...
This article sets out to stimulate discussion on the sociological value of fiction in the wider stud...
© 2019 Ruth Mahalia McHugh-DillonThis thesis analyses how Junot Diaz’s fiction “takes on” the legaci...
In the United States, where equality is preached, a severe inequality can still be seen in the treat...
In his most recent collection of short stories, This is How You Lose Her, Pulitzer Prize winner Juno...
Long considered a pervasive value of Latino cultures both south and north of the US border, machismo...
This article analyzes the interconnections between masculinity and migration in the work Hemos perdi...
The recent trend of Dominican migration to the United States echoes previous patterns of Hispanic mi...
This article uses critical discourse on the genre of literary journalism to conceptualize machismo a...
The ideas of Mexican Machismo have been crystallized in the image of the Macho, a virile man who rep...
The Dominican Republic has a long history of oppression and colonization beginning with the arrival ...
Junot Diaz\u27s Pulitzer-Prize-Winning 2007 novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao explores Domi...
This paper aims to elucidate the dyadic concepts of machismo and marianismo in Latinx culture, espec...
Junot Diaz’s Pulitzer-Prize-Winning 2007 novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao explores Dominic...
This Master thesis focuses on the dynamic of the development and rethinking of the concept of the tr...
A casual look at contemporary Latin American fiction, and its accompanying body of criticism, eviden...
This article sets out to stimulate discussion on the sociological value of fiction in the wider stud...