Making Face, Making SoulGloria Anzaldúa A bold collection of creative pieces and theoretical essays by women of color. New thought and new dialogue: a book that will teach in the most multiple sense of that word: a book that will be of lasting value to many diverse communities of women as well as to students from those communities. The authors explore a full spectrum of present concerns in over seventy pieces that vary from writing by new talents to published pieces by Audre Lorde, Joy Harjo, Norma Alarcon and Trinh T. Minh-ha. "At one level or another, all the work in the collection seeks to find ways to understand and articulate our multiple identities and senses of place...."Making Face/Making Soul" is an exciting collection of dynamic, important writings that all women of color and white feminists will learn from, enjoy, and return to again and again and again."--"Sojourner" ..".the pieces are stunning in what they risk and reveal..."--"The San Francisco Chronicle" |
From inside the book
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Page 103
... called the operator to report the dead woman , walked back up the three flights of stairs , his thoughts jumping and beating against his brain as his heart lurched and skipped from the climb . When he entered his room , the child turned ...
... called the operator to report the dead woman , walked back up the three flights of stairs , his thoughts jumping and beating against his brain as his heart lurched and skipped from the climb . When he entered his room , the child turned ...
Page 326
... called me and your call takes me through an eight years journey . Me pides que te escriba a piece of work about alliances , about my work with the Women Against Racism Committee . About this family of women housed in my gringo home ...
... called me and your call takes me through an eight years journey . Me pides que te escriba a piece of work about alliances , about my work with the Women Against Racism Committee . About this family of women housed in my gringo home ...
Page 327
... Called My Back.1 We invited Cherríe to be our keynote speaker , and she accepted . We put together a packet of readings , sent out invitations and established that our conference would be free and open to the public . It was empowering ...
... Called My Back.1 We invited Cherríe to be our keynote speaker , and she accepted . We put together a packet of readings , sent out invitations and established that our conference would be free and open to the public . It was empowering ...
Contents
What The Gypsy Said To Her Children | 3 |
Desert | 10 |
Something About the Subject Makes It Hard to Name | 20 |
Copyright | |
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Alice Walker American Anglo feminists Anthology artist Asian Asian American asked Audre Lorde become Black Lesbian Black women body called Chela Sandoval Cherrie Moraga Chicana child Chinese conference consciousness create critical culture daughter discourse Dolores dominant door ethnic ethnocentrism experience eyes face father feel felt feminism feminist theory Frances gender girl Gloria Anzaldúa groups hair hand identity Indian Julia de Burgos kids knew language learned Lesbian literary literature lives look Lorna Dee Cervantes mean mestiza Mexican Moraga mother mural never one's oppression ourselves Pat Mora person piece playful political Press privilege race racial racism remember sense silence sisters skin social speak stereotypes struggle SueLinn talk things Third World thought understand voice white women White/Anglo whitewomen woman women of color women's movement women's studies words writing