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FORGING A NEW TYPE OF FEMINIST IDENTITY: CHICANA FEMINISM, FEMININITY, AND THE INSTITUTION OF MEMORY
Author(s) -
GOT Monica
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
synergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2777-0354
pISSN - 2777-0346
DOI - 10.24818/sys/2021/17/1.01
Subject(s) - femininity , gender studies , oppression , sociology , identity (music) , institution , feminism , aesthetics , political science , art , law , social science , politics
Drawing on Jan Assmann’s interpretation of cultural memory as devoid of any racial/biological component, as well as James Clifford’s repudiation of the notion of cultural purity, the paper redefines memory as a mentally configured cultural institution, claiming that any reconfiguration of group identity is an act of symbolic violence. By emphasizing the crucial role that identity plays in understanding the fundamental themes tackled by Chicana literature—patriarchal oppression, racial terror, domestic abuse, sexism, homophobia—, the paper illustrates the extent to which the ethnic-gender binomial, i.e. belonging to a group that faces bias on various levels (femininity, Mexican American genealogy and, sporadically, sexual minority status), stands at the very core of the desire to redefine identity that largely fuels contemporary Chicana prose.

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