
INCORPORATING AMBIGUITY INTO GIRLHOOD EXPERIENCES: GENDER STEREOTYPES AND IDENTITY NEGOTIATIONS IN MARY HELEN PONCE'S HOYT STREET AND NORMA E. CANTÚ'S CANÍCULA: SNAPSHOTS OF A GIRLHOOD EN LA FRONTERA.
Author(s) -
Andrea Fernández-García
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
revista de estudios norteamericanos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.101
H-Index - 1
eISSN - 2253-8410
pISSN - 1133-309X
DOI - 10.12795/ren.2020.i24.04
Subject(s) - allegiance , femininity , liminality , sociology , narrative , gender studies , identity (music) , ambiguity , art , anthropology , aesthetics , literature , philosophy , politics , linguistics , political science , law
This paper reconsiders the Chicana girlhood narratives of Mary Helen Ponce and Norma E. Cantú, Hoyt Street and Canícula respectively, as instances of the ambiguous gender identities that lie at the core of much post-Borderlands theory. Drawing on Jose Esteban Muñoz’s theory of disidentification, Jennifer Ayala’s concept of “mothering in the borderlands” and Gloria Anzaldúa’s latest insights on liminality and fluidity, I contend that the female characters of the novels under analysis enter into a contradictory dialogue with the patriarchal archetypes of the mother, the virgin and the whore. Thus, this paper departs from previous feminist approaches to these texts, which have disregarded the characters’ allegiance and non-allegiance to patriarchal discourses on Chicana femininity. My aim with this essay is to advance new readings of these girlhood narratives as well as to contribute to research into the fragmentary and largely evasive character of Chicana identities.