Works matching Bless Me, Ultima (Book : Anaya)
Results: 16
In Search of Anaya's Carp: Mapping Ecological Consciousness and Chicano Myth.
- Published in:
- 2005
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
The Courage to See Clearly.
- Published in:
- English Journal, 2019, v. 108, n. 4, p. 11, doi. 10.58680/ej201930043
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
The Golden Carp and Moby Dick: Rudolfo Anaya's Multi-Culturalism.
- Published in:
- 1999
- By:
- Publication type:
- Book Review
Process for Results.
- Published in:
- California English, 1996, v. 1, n. 4, p. 20
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima: Folk Culture in Literature.
- Published in:
- 1980
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
Border Conflicts in Rudolfo Anaya's: Bless Ale, Ultima.
- Published in:
- 2020
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
Viewpoints.
- Published in:
- Southwestern American Literature, 2020, v. 45, n. 2, p. 5
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
HYBRID LANDSCAPES AS CATALYSTS FOR CULTURAL RECONCILIATION IN LESLIE MARMON SILKO'S CEREMONY AND RUDOLFO ANAYA'S BLESS ME, ULTIMA.
- Published in:
- 2006
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
From Libro to Libretto: Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima.
- Published in:
- Blue Mesa Review, 2020, n. 42, p. 21
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
Blue Mesa Review’s 30th Anniversary Interview with Founder Rudolfo Anaya.
- Published in:
- 2019
- By:
- Publication type:
- Interview
Hybrid Voices in the Borderlands: Translation and Reconstruction of Mexican Images in Rudolfo Anaya.
- Published in:
- 2014
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
Times of Conflict: "Bless Me, Ultima" as a Novel of Acculturation.
- Published in:
- 2000
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
THE USE OF LIMINALITY IN THE DECONSTRUCTION OF WOMEN'S ROLES: RUDOLFO ANAYA'S BLESS ME, ULTIMA.
- Published in:
- 2017
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
"The Relationships of Rivers": Neobaroque and Riverine Recreations in Anaya's New Mexican Tierra.
- Published in:
- MELUS, 2023, v. 48, n. 1, p. 70, doi. 10.1093/melus/mlad011
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
World War II Soldiers of Color in James Baldwin's Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone and Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima.
- Published in:
- 2020
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism
"Jasón's Indiana": Mexican Americans and the Denial of Indigenous Ethnicity in Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima.
- Published in:
- 2004
- By:
- Publication type:
- Literary Criticism