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Banned in Arizona: Dark Gifts, Taboos, Secrets and Transformations in Chicana Literature

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On January 28, 2014, the UNM Latin American and Iberian Institute (LAII) hosted Dr. Tey Diana Rebolledo, Distinguished Professor Emerita with the Department of Spanish & Portuguese and faculty affiliate with the LAII, at UNM, as part of its Spring 2014 LAII Lecture Series. Rebolledo is the author/editor of many books, book chapters, and articles, including The Chronicles of Panchita Villa and Other Guerrilleras: Essays on Chicana/Latina Literature and Criticism, (University of Texas Press, 2005), Women's Tales from the New Mexico WPA: La diabla a pie (Arte Público Press, 2000), and Women Singing in the Snow: An Analysis of Chicana Literature (University of Arizona Press, 1995). She has been named a Distinguished Professor, a UNM Regents' Professor, and a New Mexico Eminent Scholar. She has been the recipient of an NEH Fellowship, a Bogliasco Institute Fellowship, a Rockefeller Fellowship and a Danforth Fellowship. Her current research focuses on Chicana/o literature and contemporary Southwest Hispano/a literature and culture. This lecture will discuss the issues of banned books, beginning with the banning of Chicano Studies books in Tucson, Arizona, several years ago. Among the books banned was Rebolledo's anthology, Infinite Divisions: An Anthology of Chicana Literature (co-edited by Eliana Rivero) (University of Arizona Press, 1995). Why ban Chicano books? What do these writers discuss that is so dangerous?

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Publication Date

1-28-2014

Banned in Arizona: Dark Gifts, Taboos, Secrets and Transformations in Chicana Literature

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