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Cherríe
L. Moraga . . . .written . . . .edited. . .
For
permission to reprint from any of the books please complete
the Reprint
Request Form.
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The Hungry Woman
In
"The Hungry Woman," an apocalyptic play written at the end of the
millennium, Moraga uses mythology and an intimate realism to describe
the embattled position of Chicanos and Chicanas, not only in the
United States but in relation to each other. Drawing from the Greek
Medea and the Mexican myth of La Llorona, she portrays a woman gone mad
between her longing for another woman and for the Indian nation
which is denied her.
The Heart of the Earth
In
Heart of the Earth, a feminist revisioning of the Quiché
Maya Popul Vuh story, Moraga creates an allegory for contemporary
Chicanismo in which the enemy is white, patriarchal, and greedy
for hearts, both female and fecund. Through humor and inventive
tale twisting, Moraga brings her vatos locos home from the deadly
underworld to reveal that the real power of creation is found in
the masa Grandma is grinding up in her metate. The script, a collaboration
with master puppet maker Ralph Lee, was created for the premiere
production of the play at The Public Theater in New York in 1994.
In an afterword to this edition, Moraga comments on her concerns
about nationhood, indigenism, queer sexuality, and gender information.
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20th
Anniversary Expanded Edition of a Chicana Classic
LOVING
IN THE WAR YEARS
Cherríe
Moraga has added a new generational perspective to her classic
collection of essays and poetry, Loving in the War Years.
The four new essays in this expanded edition are written in
a voice nearly a generation older than that which echoes off
the pages Moraga first wrote in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
The original section of Loving paints a vivid portrait of
Moraga's coming-of-age as a Chicana and a lesbian at a time
when the political merging of those two identities was severely
censured. The new section is testimony to the complexity of
identity politics in the time of the Right, as leftists of
all stripes aimed to harness their hard-won self-knowledge
and safe territory in the struggle to build power across their
constituencies. Maintaining her focus on issues of race, sexuality,
ideology, and political power, Moraga's posture is now closer
to that of a zen warrior than a street-fighter, but her passionate
engagement with life remains as intimate, insightful, and
controversial as ever.
Weaving together poetry and prose, Spanish and English, family
history and political theory, Loving in the War Years has
been a classic in the feminist and Chicano canon since its
1983 release. The war years continue, and loving still resides
in the uncensored word. The silenced sentence-lo que nunca
pasó por sus labios-once spoken, inspires insurrection.
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THE
LAST GENERATION
This
highly politicized and intensely personal work bravely and
eloquently argues for a reconceptualization of gender, sexuality,
race, art, nationalism, and the politics of survival.
Crossing literary genres and moving freely between Spanish
and English, Moraga ruminates on her identity as a lesbian
writer/activist and her role in the Chicano community, weaving
a rich tapestry of ancestors, lovers, politics, poetry, and
life on the streets. Ultimately, The Last Generation's fierce
honesty and incisive political analysis offer more than an
inspiring portrait of the struggle of an activist artist;
they build a compelling case for a radical transformation
of consciousness and society.
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WAITING
IN THE WINGS:
Portrait of a Queer Motherhood
A
jewel of a book by this celebrated Chicana lesbian writer
chronicling "one small human being's struggle for survival,"
her 21/2-pound premature baby boy. While the specifics belong
to Moraga and her loved ones, the tale is told in common with
every woman who has experienced the wonder and terror of pregnancy,
the trauma of a child's near-death.
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THIS
BRIDGE CALLED MY BACK
Out of Print
Single copies may be available-inquire here |
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THE
SEXUALITY OF LATINAS
edited
by Norma Alarcón, Ana Castillo, and Cherríe
Moraga
Sexuality
is a collage of essays, poetry, fiction, and artwork from
the "actively heterosexual, to the celibate, to the secretly
sexual, to the politically visible lesbian." Both poignant
and humorous, it's thirty-seven contributors examine attitudes
toward and representations of sexuality. Among others, it
features Gloria Anzuldúa, Elvia Alvarado, Julia Alvarez,
Ana Castillo, Barbara Brinson Curiel, Denise Chavéz,
Sandra Cisneros, Lucha Corpi, Arcelia Ponce, Ana María
Simo, Carmen Tafolla, and Luz María Umpierre.
Out of print
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CUENTOS: STORIES BY LATINAS
edited by Alma Gómez, and Cherríe Moraga, and Mariana Romo-Carmona
Cuentos: Stories by Latinas describe the varied experiences of Hispanic women. Anger, love, compassion, humor and pathos fill the pages of this collection. Most importantly, these women speak of their ability to overcome daily struggles of survival, and prevail.
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