Thursday, October 24, 2019
Bless Me, Ultima: The Cultural Distress Of A Young Society Essay
 Bless Me, Ultima: The Cultural Distress of a Young Society      An answer to the discussion question of whether or not there is a  defined border culture would need a great number of years in field research, but  we can also observe a few of the characteristics of such border culture just by  looking at scholastic essays and books related to the topic. Within the  research that I did, I found a number of scholars who, while defining the border,  mention all the specific or special characteristics of this new emerging society,  but who also very few times defined it as such. In the book that I researched,  Bless Me Ultima, by Rudolfo A. Anaya, we find many of those characteristics.  There is already much work on this piece of literature, therefore, I decided to  present my research and study in two ways. First, I will give a personal  analysis of the work, in which I will discuss the different topics and  parallelisms that I believe are related to an emerging border culture, and  second, I will discuss and complete analysis made by Roberto Cantu, published  in The Iden tification and Analysis of Chicano Literature.  The novel by Rudolfo Anaya Bless Me, Ultima, was printed in June 1972,  but won the first price in the Second Annual Premio Quinto Sol Literary Award in  1971.  The main characters of the novel are Antonio, his father, mother, two  sisters, three brothers, Tenorio and his three daughters, and Ultima. The  argument presents how a child, (Antonio), matures in one year, thanks to the  different episodes that he goes through. Antonio, a seven year old child,  narrates in first person, and describes the events that changed his life from  the moment that Ultima arrived at his house. During the beginning of the book,  his thoughts and actions are typical of such age, but as the events take place,  Antonio changes and matures incredible fast through the text. It is even hard  to find where the changes in his behavior take place, due to Rudolfo's smooth  literary transitions.  Carl and Paula Shirley condense their presentation of Bless Me, Ultima  by simply mentioning the story line of the book:  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  She (Ultima) is present from the boy's earliest experiences growing  up, family conflict, school, religion, evil and death... Much good in  this novel, beauty, magic, New Mexico landscape, legends... (Shirley à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  and  Shirley, 105).  All of th...              ...;  London: Duke University Press.    Creel, J. (1986). The People Next Door, an Interpretative History of Mexico and  Mexicans. New York: John Day.    Diaz-Guerrero, R. (1991). Understanding Mexicans and Americans. New York:  Plenum Press.    Di-Bella, J. (1989). Literatura de la Frontera. California: Binational Press.      Frost, E. (1972). Las Categorias de la Cultura Mexicana. Mexico: Universidad  Nacional Autonoma de Mexico.  Herrera-Sobek, M. (1992). Toward a promised land: La frontera as a  myth and reality in ballad and song. Aztlan 21 no 1-2:227-62 '92 '96    Jimenez, F. (1979). The Identification and Analysis of Chicano Literature.  New York: Bilingual Press.    Miller, T. (1981). On the Border. New York: Harper & Row, Publishers.    Salado Alvarez, V. (1968). De como escapo Mexico de ser Yankee. Mexico:  Editorial Jus.    Saldivar, R. (1990). Chicano Narrative. Wisconsin: The University of  Wisconsin Press.    Shirley C. & Shirley P. (1988). Understanding Chicano Literature. Columbia:  University of South Carolina Press.    Universidad Autonoma de Baja California. (1983). Estudios Fronterizos.  Revista del Instituto de investigaciones sociales. Mexicali: Universidad  Autonoma de Baja California.                       
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