Browsing by Subject "Mexican American literature"
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Item Electronic Information Sources at the Benson Latin American Collection(Benson Latin American Collection, 1998-08) Schroer, CraigThis annotated list is intended as a practical guide to quickly locating databases containing information relevant to Latin American studies. All databases listed are available in the Benson Latin American Collection and anyone may use them. Many of these resources are also available in other UT campus libraries on "UT Library Online" (UTLOL) computer workstations or via web access for users with valid UT ID (or a UT computer account).Item Mexican Americans in Texas: Notable Works, 1990-1996(Benson Latin American Collection, 1997-05) Gutiérrez, MargoThis bibliography updates Biblionoticias No. 55, Mexican Americans in Texas: Notable Works, 1985-1989 and, with few exceptions, lists only published works that treat historical and social science topics relating to the Mexican American presence in Texas, from the Spanish colonial period to the present. Other titles that treat topics integral to the Mexican American cultural landscape are also included.Item To(o) queer the Chican@s : disrupting genders in the post-borderlands(2010-05) Cuevas, Teresa Jackqueline; Cvetkovich, Ann, 1957-; Perez, Domino Renee, 1967-; Lim�n, Jose; Moore, Lisa; Paredez, Deborah; Richardson, Matt“To(o) Queer the Chican@s: Disrupting Genders in the Post-Borderlands" examines representations of non-normative genders and sexualities in Mexican American literature.Item Whose house is it anyway? : architects of the 'house' leitmotif in the literature from Mexican America(1999-05) Rodríguez, Rodrigo Joseph; Limón, José EduardoThe literature written and being spoken by writers of Mexican origin in the United States continues to reformulate the notion of borders as well as subjects and forms within and beyond the house leitmotif. Writings by Sandra Cisneros, Pat Mora, and Tomás Rivera construct public and private spaces that merit validation in historical, literary, and cultural contexts. As architects, Chicana and Chicano writers challenge the nationalist canon and house.