39 pages • 1 hour read
Gloria E. AnzalduaA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Mas antes en los ranchos” is a series of poems describing the early days of Anzaldúa’s life on the ranch. “White-Wing Season” creates an image of white men with guns filling the silence of the sky with buckshot as they hunt. The Chicana woman hears this from her outpost near the washtub. In “Cervicide,” a young girl is forced to kill a fawn with a hammer to save her father from the game warden. “Horse” describes some white teenagers cutting up a horse and getting away with it, while the Mexicans who live nearby must keep quiet; if “you’re Mexican / you’re born old” (129). In “Immaculate, Inviolate: Como Ella,” Anzaldúa describes her grandmother, a proud and dignified woman who was scarred by a fire and lived through drought. Anzaldúa once asked her: “Have you ever had an orgasm?” (132). “Nopalitos” centers around cooking cactus—both the arduous process and Anzaldúa’s eventual departure from this tradition.
“La Pérdida” presents a brutal depiction of life in the borderlands. “In sus plumas el viento,” Anzaldúa describes the work of her mother and the challenging conditions of her life: “White heat no water no place to pee / the men staring at her ass” (139).
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