This essay examines two novels by Dominican American author Julia Alvarez, How the García Girls Lost Their Accents and In the Time of the Butterflies. By undertaking a transnational feminist reading practice, the author explicates the novels’ critique of the political constructions of the Latin American Third World as “deprived” and “depraved.” Alvarez’s work traces how these representations have been constitutive of a North American liberal feminist imaginary, limiting its conception of the forms of feminist agency available to women in the Americas as well as the liberal social rebellion and “development” of the woman of color in the United States. Ultimately, the two novels uncover the imperial history between the United States and the D...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
Julia Álvarez (Dominican Republic, 1951) and her family left the Dominican Republic in 1960 to escap...
This project explores the pathologization of Latinas in works by Dominican American, Puerto Rican, C...
Throughout her writing career Julia Alvarez has been examining definitions of the “Americas” and ret...
Ethnic marginalisation minorities is a recurring theme in ethnic writers’ works, such as Julia Alvar...
This paper endeavors to explore the distinct ways in which the Dominican motherhood ideology promote...
This essay will explore the concept of ethnicity in the stories and through the characters in the wr...
This research is focused on three Dominican-Americans and some of their work: Julia Álvarez How the ...
As an immigrant and diasporic intellectual writer, Dominican-American poet, novelist, and essayist J...
Julia Álvarez pertenece a la más joven generación de escritoras hispanocaribeñas afincadas en Estado...
This work explores the identities and experiences of two minor characters (Laura García and Chucha) ...
This article analyses three novels by Julia Alvarez–How the García Girls Lost their Accents (1991), ...
Julia Alvarez’s novel, In the Time of Butterflies, is not confined to a single voice. Instead, her w...
The Mirabal sisters opposed the regime of Rafael Trujillo, a notorious Dominican dictator who terror...
This thesis studies three texts by three U.S. Latina authors from the Hispanic Caribbean through the...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
Julia Álvarez (Dominican Republic, 1951) and her family left the Dominican Republic in 1960 to escap...
This project explores the pathologization of Latinas in works by Dominican American, Puerto Rican, C...
Throughout her writing career Julia Alvarez has been examining definitions of the “Americas” and ret...
Ethnic marginalisation minorities is a recurring theme in ethnic writers’ works, such as Julia Alvar...
This paper endeavors to explore the distinct ways in which the Dominican motherhood ideology promote...
This essay will explore the concept of ethnicity in the stories and through the characters in the wr...
This research is focused on three Dominican-Americans and some of their work: Julia Álvarez How the ...
As an immigrant and diasporic intellectual writer, Dominican-American poet, novelist, and essayist J...
Julia Álvarez pertenece a la más joven generación de escritoras hispanocaribeñas afincadas en Estado...
This work explores the identities and experiences of two minor characters (Laura García and Chucha) ...
This article analyses three novels by Julia Alvarez–How the García Girls Lost their Accents (1991), ...
Julia Alvarez’s novel, In the Time of Butterflies, is not confined to a single voice. Instead, her w...
The Mirabal sisters opposed the regime of Rafael Trujillo, a notorious Dominican dictator who terror...
This thesis studies three texts by three U.S. Latina authors from the Hispanic Caribbean through the...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
Julia Álvarez (Dominican Republic, 1951) and her family left the Dominican Republic in 1960 to escap...
This project explores the pathologization of Latinas in works by Dominican American, Puerto Rican, C...