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Policing the maternal: Puerto Rican and Cuban American literature and the legacy of the Cold War.

机译:警惕孕产妇:波多黎各人和古巴美国文学以及冷战的遗产。

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摘要

This dissertation considers the role of literary representations of the maternal in the development of late-twentieth-century American literature by Latinas and focuses on the complex ways in which these contemporary figurations of mothering are haunted by a historical consciousness of policed maternity, particularly in relation to controlled fertility during the Cold War. Exploring the Latina writer's preoccupation with maternity during the Latino Literary Boom of the late twentieth century, this project seeks to understand why significant histories of maternal containment, including periods of coerced sterilization and state controlled parenting are almost universally absent from literary texts that often seek to recover, reclaim, and retell the history of major waves of Latin American immigration to the US at the height of the Cold War. Building on recent discussions of the Cold War's profound influence on white women's bodies, my dissertation considers the lost narratives of maternal intervention---particularly with regards to the sterilization campaign (1937-1965) in Puerto Rico in which over one third of the island's women were sterilized and the Peter Pan program (1960-1962) in Cuba wherein over 14,000 Cuban children were relocated to US orphanages. By tracing the trope of maternity through the texts of several key Latina authors in light of the political implication of these absent narratives, I will argue that through the representations of motherhood we can find the legacy of these unwritten narratives and the embedded codes through which the silence about these historical realities speak. Through an engagement with recent scholarship in the field of Latina/o studies, second and third-wave feminist theory, and the history and politics of the Cold War, this dissertation furthers recent trends in Latina scholarship that seek to provide a historical framework for what Frances Aparicio and Susana Chavez-Silverman theorize as the tropicalization and neocolonization of the Latina body. By historicizing images of maternity in Latina literature in the context of twentieth century immigration as a Cold War phenomenon, this project also seeks to intervene in important debates by Cold War historians about the influence of the Cold War on constructions of domesticity and femininity in the US.
机译:本文考虑了母体的文学表现形式在拉美裔二十世纪后期美国文学发展中的作用,并着重探讨了这些当代的母体形象被警察的历史意识所困扰的复杂方式,特别是在关系方面在冷战期间控制生育。在探索二十世纪末期拉丁裔文学繁荣时期拉美裔作家对生育的关注时,该项目旨在了解为什么母体收容的重要历史(包括强迫绝育和国家控制的育儿时期)几乎普遍不存在于文学文本中,在冷战最激烈的时期追回,收回和重述拉丁美洲移民到美国的主要浪潮的历史。在最近关于冷战对白人女性身体的深远影响的讨论的基础上,我的论文考虑了孕产妇干预的流失叙事,尤其是波多黎各的绝育运动(1937-1965年),在该运动中,该岛的三分之一以上妇女在古巴进行了绝育手术,并执行了彼得潘(Peter Pan)计划(1960-1962),其中有14,000多名古巴儿童被转移到美国孤儿院。根据这些缺席叙事的政治含义,通过拉美裔主要作家的著作追踪产假的说法,我将辩解说,通过以母性为代表,我们可以找到这些未成文叙事的遗产以及嵌入的法典。对这些历史现实保持沉默说话。通过与拉丁语研究领域,第二波和第三波女权主义理论以及冷战的历史和政治领域的最新学术研究合作,本论文进一步推动了拉丁语学术研究的最新趋势,这些趋势旨在为以下领域提供历史框架: Frances Aparicio和Susana Chavez-Silverman提出了拉丁裔身体的热带化和新殖民化的理论。通过在二十世纪移民作为冷战现象的背景下对拉丁文学中的孕产图像进行历史化处理,该项目还试图干预冷战历史学家关于冷战对美国家庭和女性化结构影响的重要辩论。 。

著录项

  • 作者

    Boria-Rivera, Evelyn J.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Notre Dame.;

  • 授予单位 University of Notre Dame.;
  • 学科 American Studies.;Hispanic American Studies.;Literature American.;Literature Caribbean.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 193 p.
  • 总页数 193
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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