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Cherríe Moraga  (1952 -)

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The Last Generation : Prose and Poetry

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Loving in the War Years (South End Press Classics Series, Volume 6)Loving in the War Years / lo que nunca paso por sus labios by Cherríe Moraga

"I am a Chicana lesbian. My own particular relationship to being a sexual person; and a radical stand in direct contradiction to, and in violation of, the women I was raised to be." Through the poetry, prose, and personal stories in Loving in the War Years, Cherrie Moraga explores this contradiction, weaving her confusion and pain with her eventual self-acceptance. She writes about prejudices she suffers because she is half-white and a lesbian born in a Catholic, Chicano culture. She tells of her frustrations with the importance men were given as she was growing up and the exclusion of lesbian women of color from the women's movement. In her struggles, she draws from those parts of her upbringing which are necessary to her physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being - the love of her mother's home, the sense of community among Chicana women, the smell of the candles in church, and the spiritual need to respect something beyond herself - creating a portrait of beauty, anger, and independence. "Spirituality which inspires activism and, similarly, politics which move the spirit - which draw from the deep-seated place of our greatest longings for freedom - give meaning to our lives." Some knowledge of Spanish may be helpful with these writings, but even without it Cherrie Moraga's words will touch your heart and your mind. -- From 500 Great Books by Women; review by Holly Smith

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Waiting in the Wings : Portrait of a Queer MotherhoodWaiting in the Wings : Portrait of a Queer Motherhood by Cherríe Moraga

At age 40, Chicana writer and activist Cherrie Moraga decided she wanted to have a child. Waiting in the Wings comprises diary entries made during her pregnancy and the first difficult years of her son's life, as well as retrospective essays on motherhood, partnership, men and woman, and families. Moraga's writing is a rich, fluid mix of English and Spanish that explores the personal, social, and spiritual consequences of lesbian motherhood.

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Making Face, Making Soul: A Chicana Feminist Homepage  

Excerpt:

Cherrie Moraga, "The Danger Lies in Ranking the Oppressions" (1983) 

"In this country, lesbianism is a poverty-as is being brown, as is being a woman, as is being just plain poor.  The danger lies in ranking the oppressions.  The danger lies in failing to acknowledge the specificity of the oppression.  The danger lies in attempting to deal with oppression purely from a theoretical base.  Without an emotional, heartfelt grappling with the source of our own oppression, without naming the enemy within ourselves and outside of us, no authentic, non-hierarchical connection among oppressed groups can take place." (Moraga, 52-53) 

From Cherrie Moraga, Loving in the War Years/lo que nunca paso por sus labios Boston:  South End Press, 1983. 

  

Voices From the Gaps- Cherrie Moraga

Excerpt:

Cherrie Moraga was born in Los Angeles in 1952. She is of Chicana/Anglo descent which has influenced her experiences as a lesbian poet, playwright, essayist, editor, teacher, and activist.

Moraga describes herself as "La Guera," which means fair-skinned. She was born with the features of her Chicana mother and the skin of her Anglo father. The history of her family has been a large influence on Moraga's writing. Her respect for her mother comes from the hardships and struggles that she endured throughout her childhood. At a young age her mother became the main support of her own family after her father left. She worked to survive and had little opportunity to get an education. Without a formal education in English, Moraga's mother was considered illiterate in this country. Her fluency in Spanish was not passed on to Moraga or her siblings in the hope that they may be able to pass more effectively in "white" society. Because Moraga was fair-skinned, "passing" became a part of daily life that made it easier for her to succeed in the United States. Moraga realized the advantages of having "white privilege" (a term that refers to the privileges of being white and therefore having more advantages in life). This had a counter-affect on Moraga's ability to connect fully with her Chicana background, pulling her further from her mother and the knowledge of who she really was. Moraga explains, "From all this, I experience a huge disparity between what I was born into and what I grew to become..."

This site includes some poetry by Moraga, as well as a bibliography of works about Moraga.

  

Reading Response to "A Long Line of Vendidas"

By George Albert Méndez

Question:  How does Moraga characterize herself as a traitor?

Excerpt:

The term that Moraga uses to describe that cardinal rule which all Chicanas must follow is heterosexism: "[T]he Chicana's sexual commitment to the Chicano male." Because Mexicans, and consequently Chicanos, have always emphasized and valued the males of their societies over the females, the consensus reached among males and females of these societies denounces any behavior that deviates from this norm. As a result, "Chicanas begin to turn [their] backs on each other either to gain male approval or to avoid being sexually stigmatized by them under the name of puta, vendida, jota."  It was in denouncing these values that Moraga became a traitor of her people--sexually, culturally, and politically...

  

Cherrie Moraga

From GayGate.com

Excerpt:

Cherrie Moraga was born on September 25, 1952, in Whittier, California. The daughter of a Chicana and an Anglo, she studied at a small, nonsectarian private college in Hollywood, and earned her B.A. in 1974. For the next three years she worked as a high school teacher in Los Angeles. During this time she enrolled in a writing class at the Women's Building and produced her first lesbian love poems. Her discovery of Judy GRAHN's poem "A Woman Is Talking to Death" coalesced in her the need to write not only as a lesbian but as a Chicana, a process of politicization that was further enhanced by her subsequent meeting with Grahn in person. In 1977 Moraga moved to San Francisco, and in 1980 received an M.A. from San Francisco State...

  

Moraga, Cherrie - Heroes and Saints

Contains plot details and commentary featuring the writer's play, which chronicles the struggles of Mexican immigrants working in California.

Excerpt:

This searing play takes place in California's central valley where Mexican immigrants are employed at survival wages to work in fields poisoned by pesticides. Their ramshackle government homes are built over dumps where toxic waste poisons the water. The community has suffered a high incidence of cancer--especially in children--, birth defects, and other illnesses related to long-term intake of toxic substances...

  

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