Judith Ortiz Cofer’s Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood — a coming of age narrative played out against the backdrop of diasporic locations—is most often read in light of a series of clearly articulated dichotomies that present culture, identity, and home as dialectically opposed conditions that require cultural synthesis. In what follows, I argue that Ortiz Cofer’s text, while full of clashing dichotomies, does not actually propose a synthesis in the form of hybridization. Rather, Silent Dancing presents a complicated and nuanced consideration of home — here in terms of both the gendered, domestic space of the home, as well as the larger political and cultural space of the nation — that is informed by feminist practice on the one hand, and diasporic locations on the other
Primary Language | English |
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Journal Section | Research Article |
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Publication Date | October 1, 2015 |
Published in Issue | Year 2015 Issue: 42 |
JAST - Journal of American Studies of Turkey