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In the field of Latinx literature, Ana Castillo and Sandra Cisneros are two of the most recognized and influential contemporary authors. While they are often identified as Latina or Chicana writers, rarely are they thought of as Chicago authors, even though they both grew up in the city and have written work in which Chicago figures prominently. This chhapter locates Castillo and Cisneros within the field of Chicago literature and examines the significance of Chicago neighborhood place and transnational influence in their fiction, poetry, and autobiographical writing. In their texts, the Near West Side of Chicago emerges as a pluri-ethnic community in which poetic speakers and protagonists come to understand their own ethnic identities in relation to those of other immigrant communities. Their work demonstrates an intersecting Mexican Chicago literary identity that draws our attention to the history of Mexican migration to the Midwest, and expands our concept of what constitutes Chicago literature.
Despite both its rhetoric and its intentions, activism is often ableist. A contemporary project to crip feminism is fundamentally epistemological and requires re-evaluating the state of embodiment, forms of social justice, and choices towards which we understand ourselves to be moving. Disability scholars seem increasingly interested in studying not just what we read (a matter of representation) but how we read and how narrative is formulated (a matter of knowing). Many recent imaginative works by women take up illness and disability not as classic metaphors for limitation and disenfranchisementor even just to create realistic portrayalsbut as specifically and emphatically phenomenological modes of engaging the world. With readings of Chicana feminist fiction (Ana Castillo), graphic memoir (Alison Bechdel) and black speculative fiction (Octavia Butler), I argue that the body under duress becomes a source of rewriting the terms under which identities and social relationships are defined. In this sense they speak and write directly into a moment in which it is the capacity to think courageously, and expansively, about what things 1mean that we must rigorously safeguard.
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