ABSTRACT

The Chicana writer, by the fact that she is even writing in today’s society, is making a revolutionary act. Embodied in the act of writing is her voice against others’ definitions of who she is and what she should be. There is, in her open expression and in the very nature of this act of opening up, a refusal to submit to a quality of silence that has been imposed upon her for centuries. In the act of writing, the Chicana is saying “No,” and by doing so she becomes the revolutionary, a source of change, and a real force for humanization.