Description
One afternoon in fall 2015 Cristina Devereaux Ram?rez's mother called and, with a tone of urgency in her voice, asked her to come to the house and take a look at something she had discovered when she was sorting through boxes in the attic. When Ram?rez arrived, she found her family sifting through papers in an old vegetable box, reading some of the more than 750 pages of Spanish language poems, short stories, fables, and dichos Ram?rez's maternal grandmother, Ramona Gonz?lez, had written. Some pieces were works in progress, complete with word and phrase strikethroughs and handwritten notes in the margins, while others were neatly typed prose or what might have been final drafts. None of Gonz?lez's writings had seen the outside of that box for decades, at least since 1995 when the family matriarch passed away.
Gonz?lez-or Do?a Ramona, as she was often called-was born in 1906 in the El Paso border barrio of Chihuahuita, sometimes referred to as the Ellis Island of the Southwest. Her writing celebrates the rich Mexican American culture of Chihuahuita, a neighborhood the National Trust for Historic Preservation identified in 2016 as one of America's most endangered historic places. A mother, corner grocery store owner, published writer, and community activist, Gonz?lez was one of the few Tejanas profiled in Worthy Mothers of Texas, 1776-1976
A Story of Stories from a Texas Border Barrio, Ram?rez chronicles the life of her abuela with the care of a granddaughter and, with the eye of a scholar, analyzes selections from Gonz?lez's work and its significance to El Paso history, Chicano literature, border barrio folklore, and cross-border civic movements in the mid-twentieth century.
Author: Cristina Devereaux Ram?rez
Publisher: Tinta Books
Published: 08/20/2024
Pages: 322
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.94lbs
Size: 8.00h x 6.00w x 0.73d
ISBN13: 9781595349965
ISBN10: 1595349960
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Hispanic & Latino
- History | United States | State & Local | Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)
- Literary Criticism | Women Authors
About the Author
Cristina Devereaux Ramírez is an associate professor of English and director of the rhetoric, composition, and the teaching of English graduate program at the University of Arizona. She is the author of Occupying Our Space: The Mestiza Rhetorics of Mexican Women Journalists and Activists, 1887-1942, which won the 2016 Winifred Bryan Horner Outstanding Book Prize, and the coeditor, with Jessica Enoch, of Mestiza Rhetorics: An Anthology of Mexicana Activism in the Spanish Language Press, 1875-1922. She lives in Tucson.