ABSTRACT

This collection of essays explores the intertwining social conditions of ethnicity and gender as they are represented in short stories by contemporary American women. The introduction to the collection explains the theoretical understanding of gender and ethnicity as social constructions that provide a context for individual experience. The collection brings together analyses of short stories that focus on major ethnic cultures in the United States: Mexican American, Puerto Rican, Japanese American, Asian American, African American, Jewish American, white Protestant American, and Native American. Each essay testifies to the struggles of women within patriarchal cultures in America, and each explores how different ethnic identities set the terms of these gender struggles. The essays also reveal the complications of other important social issues, such as class, sexual preference, and religion. Individually, each essay contributes a significant new analysis of a short story or collection by an important contemporary American writer. Together, the essays indicate the complexity and significance of this cultural approach to women's fiction, demonstrate the critical theories that are currently developing in the fields of gender and ethnic studies, and suggest that neither ethnicity nor gender can legitimately be considered alone.

chapter 1|16 pages

(Dis)Continuous Narrative

The Articulation of a Chicana Feminist Voice in Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street

chapter 2|15 pages

Beyond Otherness

Negotiated Identities and Viramontes’ “The Cariboo Cafe”

chapter 3|17 pages

Judith Ortiz Cofer’s Silent Dancing

Making More Room for Puerto Rican Womanhood

chapter 4|13 pages

Flight and Arrival

A Study of Padma Hejmadi’s Short Story, “Weather Report”

chapter 5|13 pages

Subversive Extravagance

Women in Hisaye Yamamoto’s “Seventeen Syllables” and “The Legend of Miss Sasagawara”

chapter 6|16 pages

Afrekete Rising

Two Coming-out Stories by African-American Lesbians: Pat Suncircle’s “A Day’s Growth” and Audre Lorde’s “The Beginning”

chapter 7|14 pages

Race/[Gender]

Toni Morrison’s “Recitatif”

chapter 8|18 pages

Playing in the Light

White Girls Dreaming in Eudora Welty’s “Moon Lake”

chapter 9|14 pages

Ruth’s Journey into the Fields

Feminism in Ozick’s “The Pagan Rabbi”

chapter 10|18 pages

Reconstructing the Native-American Woman

Louise Erdrich’s “Fleur”