La Llorona – the crying woman – is a Mexican legend that is at least 500 years old. It no doubt arrived in Texas with the earliest Mexican settlers. And La Llorona has haunted our rivers, lakes and streams ever since, particularly in the border regions. There are dozens of versions. Here is one. La Llorona was a poor girl in a small village. She was extraordinarily beautiful with raven black hair and large almond eyes. One day when she was getting water from the town well, a handsome man on a fine horse rode up and asked her for a drink. She had never seen such a perfect man or felt so wonderfully nervous in the presence of one before. He felt the same way about her. They fell in love on the spot. He could not marry her, though, because she...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1996. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1999. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
This paper discusses the short story ‘El arroyo de la Llorona’ by female Mexican-American writer San...
La Llorona – the crying woman – is a Mexican legend that is at least 500 years old. It no doubt arri...
La Llorona, the weeping woman of Mexican legend, was first heard in Mexico City about 1550, accordin...
The story of La Llorona has been passed down from generation to generation in different Hispanic com...
The legend of The Weeping Woman intertwines with mythical pre-Hispanic referents, although it is dur...
So, we have the Rio Grande where I live. I was first told this story by um --my friend’s abuela—I th...
This presentation analyzes the classic Latin-American legend “La Llorona” translated as “The Weeping...
La Llorona, or the Weeping Woman, is perhaps the most famous figure of Mexican supernatural folklore...
This thesis studies the evolution, ideology and use of the myth of La Llorona through time in the Hi...
California has shimmered alluringly as paradise and Promised Land since long before the projections ...
Folktales collected by anthropology students in 1980–1992. NOTE: Personally identifiable information...
The online exposition “La habitación del desahogo/The Room of Relief” reinvents the legendary Mexica...
My dissertation addresses the images of La Llorona in the poetry and fiction of Chicana writers and ...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1996. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1999. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
This paper discusses the short story ‘El arroyo de la Llorona’ by female Mexican-American writer San...
La Llorona – the crying woman – is a Mexican legend that is at least 500 years old. It no doubt arri...
La Llorona, the weeping woman of Mexican legend, was first heard in Mexico City about 1550, accordin...
The story of La Llorona has been passed down from generation to generation in different Hispanic com...
The legend of The Weeping Woman intertwines with mythical pre-Hispanic referents, although it is dur...
So, we have the Rio Grande where I live. I was first told this story by um --my friend’s abuela—I th...
This presentation analyzes the classic Latin-American legend “La Llorona” translated as “The Weeping...
La Llorona, or the Weeping Woman, is perhaps the most famous figure of Mexican supernatural folklore...
This thesis studies the evolution, ideology and use of the myth of La Llorona through time in the Hi...
California has shimmered alluringly as paradise and Promised Land since long before the projections ...
Folktales collected by anthropology students in 1980–1992. NOTE: Personally identifiable information...
The online exposition “La habitación del desahogo/The Room of Relief” reinvents the legendary Mexica...
My dissertation addresses the images of La Llorona in the poetry and fiction of Chicana writers and ...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1996. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
Folktales collected by anthropology students from 1980–1999. NOTE: Personally identifiable informati...
This paper discusses the short story ‘El arroyo de la Llorona’ by female Mexican-American writer San...