In a sense, these stories are the travel narratives of women who have journeyed beyond their family circumstances to cross class borders, aided by educational opportunities that encouraged their literary gifts to blossom. Many of the essays reflect on the immigrant experience and struggles against the multiplying factors of poverty, gender, and ethnicity. Some authors recount their first moment of class awareness (Bich Minh Nguyen's occurred while watching Laverne and Shirley on the family's first television). Still others describe encounters in the relatively privileged world of higher education-where the subject of class is evident but mostly off-limits. Throughout An Angle of Vision the authors describe delicate balances of work and family, men and money, motherhood and sexuality. Each author reflects on the experiences that provided an opportunity to develop her own distinct identity and her own particular "angle of vision."
Editor Lorraine M. López is the prize-winning author of two novels, The Gifted Gabaldón Sisters and Call Me Henri, and a short-story collection, Soy la Avon Lady and Other Stories. A new collection, Homicide Survivors Picnic, is forthcoming. She is Associate Professor of English at Vanderbilt University and Associate Editor of the Afro-Hispanic Review. López is one of five nominees for the 2010 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for a collection of her short stories.
Photo © Alex Majoli, Magnum Photos.
In a sense, these stories are the travel narratives of women who have journeyed beyond their family circumstances to cross class borders, aided by educational opportunities that encouraged their literary gifts to blossom. Many of the essays reflect on the immigrant experience and struggles against the multiplying factors of poverty, gender, and ethnicity. Some authors recount their first moment of class awareness (Bich Minh Nguyen's occurred while watching Laverne and Shirley on the family's first television). Still others describe encounters in the relatively privileged world of higher education-where the subject of class is evident but mostly off-limits. Throughout An Angle of Vision the authors describe delicate balances of work and family, men and money, motherhood and sexuality. Each author reflects on the experiences that provided an opportunity to develop her own distinct identity and her own particular "angle of vision."
Editor Lorraine M. López is the prize-winning author of two novels, The Gifted Gabaldón Sisters and Call Me Henri, and a short-story collection, Soy la Avon Lady and Other Stories. A new collection, Homicide Survivors Picnic, is forthcoming. She is Associate Professor of English at Vanderbilt University and Associate Editor of the Afro-Hispanic Review. López is one of five nominees for the 2010 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for a collection of her short stories.
Photo © Alex Majoli, Magnum Photos.
An Angle of Vision: Women Writers on Their Poor and Working-Class Roots
216An Angle of Vision: Women Writers on Their Poor and Working-Class Roots
216Paperback(New Edition)
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Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780472050789 |
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Publisher: | University of Michigan Press |
Publication date: | 10/02/2009 |
Series: | Class : Culture |
Edition description: | New Edition |
Pages: | 216 |
Product dimensions: | 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d) |