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9780826333469 Academic Inspection Copy

A Woman's Place

Women Writing New Mexico
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This collective biography of six remarkable twentieth-century New Mexicans, sheds light on the distinct role of women in shaping American multi-culturalism. Maureen Reed recounts the lives of Mary Austin and Mabel Dodge Luhan, both Anglo American literary figures; Cleofas Jaramillo and Fabiola Cabeza de Baca, both Hispanic authors and folklorists; Kay Bennett, a Navajo writer and political activist; and Pablita Velarde, a Pueblo Indian painter and author. Reed shows how the emerging ideal of multiculturalism guided these women's efforts to preserve tradition even as it limited their ability to speak honestly about their lives. They endured painful conflicts between the romanticised New Mexican home they boosted publicly and the traditional gender roles they resisted privately. Their lives illustrate the difficulty of prioritising both tradition and individualism, but they also testify to the invigorating possibilities of cultural change.
Maureen Reed is professor of American studies, Minnesota State University, Moorhead.
"Reed's thoroughly annotated study "A Woman's Place: Women Writing New Mexico" suggests that New Mexico's reputation as a multicultural Land of Enchantment is really just a well-crafted surface image whose origins can be traced back to the work of six female writers of Anglo, Spanish, and Native American descent. . The author interviewed descendents, compared personal correspondence with public writings, and scoured archives to write portraits that yield startling discrepancies between the women's largely autobiographic writings and how they actually lived." "This fascinating book fills an important niche in cultural studies about minority women and their continuing struggle for equality."
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