Tentando la frontera

reconfiguración de la identidad materna en "The hungry woman: the mexican Medea" de Cherríe Moraga

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18172/jes.5987

Palabras clave:

Cherrie Moraga, The Hungry Woman: The Mexican Medea, globalización, queer, fronteras

Resumen

Este artículo analiza la correlación entre el cuerpo y la tierra en The Hungry Woman: The Mexican Medea de Cherríe Moraga. Moraga construye un mundo distópico que expone una supuesta esencia queer dentro del mercado global. Esta reformulación considera lo "queer" como una identidad sintomática moldeada por interacciones culturales, particularmente en relación con la etnicidad y la economía. La existencia de Medea transita entre fronteras geográficas, sexuales y sensoriales, lo que impulsa un examen crítico sobre la lealtad y la traición como una cuestión epistemológica. A través de la transformación de las madres mediante leyendas latinoamericanas, Moraga aboga por una ética ambiental, desafiando el nihilismo moral a menudo asociado con la interpretación cristiana de la figura de una madre infanticida.

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Citas

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Publicado

06-05-2025

Cómo citar

Huang, J. S. (2025). Tentando la frontera: reconfiguración de la identidad materna en "The hungry woman: the mexican Medea" de Cherríe Moraga. Journal of English Studies. https://doi.org/10.18172/jes.5987