"Gloria E. Anzaldúa is a crucial figure in the contemporary border and women's studies. When in 1987 she published her ground-breaking book Borderlands/ La Frontera: The New Mestiza, she became one of the most often quoted writers of the US-Mexican border, but she remains relatively little known outside Americas. In one of the first monographs written on her work, Grażyna Zygadło introduces Anzaldúa's work and outlines her feminist revisionist thinking to new audiences, especially in Europe. The author outlines these borderlands as areas where numerous systems of power, exploitation, and oppression intersect - capitalism, patriarchy, racism, and white man's supremacy. She also concentrates on the innovative philosophy of women's writing from the body that Anzaldúa has propagated and on her formative role in the women of color feminism. Zygadło also works to expand Anzaldúa's borderland thinking by applying it to the recent issues related to migration crisis and border problems in the European Union - namely the contradictory treatment of refugees at the Polish eastern border. Gloria E. Anzaldúa is situated at the intersections of various disciplines, in particular American cultural studies, feminist criticism, and Latin American postcolonial studies, and is a valuable source of knowledge about Anzaldúa's ideas for undergraduate and graduate students"-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.