Articles related to "Latin American Literature"The Moths and Other Stories takes readers on a journey through the lives of women of various ages in Chicano culture and how tradition collides with modern life.
Age meets youth and is reborn in love in Marquez's inventive tale.
Chicana and Latina authors write about diverse topics, but family relationships with all its nuances and issues is a common theme in many of these novels.
"Cumandá: The Novel of the Ecuadorian Jungle" also goes by the name of "Drama Among Savages" and was first published in 1879.
Latin America's first great poet, the seventeenth-century nun, Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, has attained the iconic force of a Frida Kahlo. Her work still resonates today.
Sonia Rivera-Valdes' short stories raise the questions about whether really forbidden stories exists or is it just a relative term.
Diaz has done it again in his epic novel about an immigrant family.
Esquivel reinterprets the legendary and tragic love affair between Malinche and Hernán Cortés in the lyrical prose that made Like Water for Chocolate a top-selling novel.
The poem "Her Kind" began life as "Night Voice on a Broomstick" and underwent several transformations before Sexton settled on the poem that became her signature piece.
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