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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

La manifestación de la diáspora, el hibridismo y el extrañamiento en la novela De cómo las muchachas García perdieron el acento de Julia Álvarez

Norell de Pelcastre, Christina January 2016 (has links)
La intención con esta tesina es analizar los conceptos diáspora, hibridismo y extrañamiento en la novela De cómo las Muchachas García perdieron el acento de Julia Álvarez (2007). El primer concepto define el desplazamiento de las personas y el segundo la mezcla de culturas e identidades que surgen al traspasar fronteras. Estos dos fenómenos muchas veces resultan en un extrañamiento; es decir, el sentimiento de no pertenecer del todo al nuevo país. No obstante, el extrañamiento también puede tener un efecto positivo ya que crea estrategias para enfrentar los nuevos problemas. Tomaremos como punto de partida los tres conceptos de diáspora, hibridismo y extrañamiento, que han sido desarrollados por Kalra, Kaur y Hutnyk (2005), Bhabha (2002) y Shklovski (1978). Así mismo intentaremos analizar el mensaje de la autora quien a través de estos conceptos muestra la búsqueda de la propia identidad en un país extraño.
2

La Evolución Discontinua del Pensamiento Poscolonial en El Siglo XX: Los Conflictos de La Identidad Colectiva el La Ensayística de Latinos en Los Estados Unidos

Bautista, Karina A. 01 May 2010 (has links)
This dissertation studies the politics of collective identity in the essays of Jesús Colón, Julia Álvarez and Richard Rodriguez. Through their essays I study the different configurations of collective identity (mainly those of Latino people, minorities, diasporic, transnational and national subjects) that these writes evaluate from their social position in the United States. A review of their works reveals important aspects about the problem of identity of a first and second generation of Latinos who try to understand themselves as part of the heterogeneous community in the United States. These three writers focus on the malleability of identity and use it to understand different ideologies and values. In his essays Colón highlights the reality of a subject that is economically marginalized by the historical process of capitalism. In addition, he advocates for the union of transnational workers of the Puerto Rican Diaspora in New York, who face stratification and social isolation. In contrast, Álvarez explores the construction of a diasporic identity that relies on history and on transnationalism. This author places emphasis on her writing as a nation, as a means to reflect and re-write the Dominican transnational identity. Rodriguez, the third essayist I study in this research, promotes the foundation of an American identity and evaluates the ways in which it is obstructed by the practices of communities that identify as minority. The objective of my research is to analyze the development of Latino identity using the models that these authors explore. I rely on their ideas and techniques to study the complicated and conflicting process of the evolution of a collective identity. Throughout the 20th century, these authors developed their own approach to the ideological fragmentation and mestizaje emphasized by postcolonial thought. This fragmentation influences their interpretation of history, ethnic/racial identity, family, language, education, cultural hybridity, representation and nationalism.

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