Under the Feet of Jesus

References

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  2. ^ "Helena Maria Viramontes". almalopez.com. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  3. ^ a b c d "Helena Maria Viramontes". UCSB Library. 2011-08-19. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  4. ^ a b c d "Guide to the Helena Maria Viramontes Papers CEMA 18". oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2020-02-15.
  5. ^ a b c d Dunlap, Brian (2016-10-04). "Latino/a Writers of Los Angeles and Southern California". Los Angeles Literature. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  6. ^ "Helena María Viramontes". eNotes. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  7. ^ Dos Santoa, Paula; et al. "Helena Maria Viramontes" (PDF). UMN Voices from the Gaps. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  8. ^ "Chisme Arte: Chicano Art". KCET. 2011-11-07. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  9. ^ "Interview with Visiting Writer Helena María Viramontes | Gonzaga University". www.gonzaga.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  10. ^ "Erased History, Forgotten Communities | Cornell Research".
  11. ^ "South America- The Place of Women in the Academic Profession". Amazons Watch Magazine. 2016-09-26. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  12. ^ Buckles, Christina Marie (2012). The Transnational Feminist Literature of Helena Maria Viramontes. Iowa: University of Iowa.
  13. ^ "Migrant Struggle".
  14. ^ "Writer Viramontes to Receive Luis Leal Literature Award". 15 August 2006.
  15. ^ "United States Artists » Helena María Viramontes". Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  16. ^ "THE SUNDAY PROFILE : WRITING WRONG : Helena Maria Viramontes Found Inspiration for Her Book and Her Activism While Living in Irvine". Los Angeles Times. 1995-09-17. Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  17. ^ a b c d Carballo, Mirian A., and Wanda H. Giles. "Helena Maria Viramontes." Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 350: Twenty-First-Century American Novelists, Second Series. A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book. Edited by Wanda H. Giles, Northern Illinois University, and James R. Giles, Northern Illinois University. Gale, 2009. 333-338
  18. ^ a b c Heredia, Juanita, and Bridget Kevane. "Praying for Knowledge: An Interview with Helena María Viramontes." In Latina Self-Portraits: Interviews with Contemporary Women Writers, edited by Bridget Kevane and Juanita Heredia. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2000. 142-54.
  19. ^ Burford, Arianne. "Cartographies of a Violent Landscape: Viramontes' and Moraga's Remapping of Feminisms in Under the Feet of Jesus and Heroes and Saints. Genders 47 (2008). Web. http://www.genders.org/g47/g47_burford.html Archived 2011-09-08 at the Wayback Machine. Reproduced in Contemporary Literary Criticism-Select.
  20. ^ Pattison, Dale (2014). "Trauma and the 710: The New Metropolis in Helena María Viramontes's Their Dogs Came with Them". Arizona Quarterly. 70 (2): 115–142. doi:10.1353/arq.2014.0009. S2CID 162376367.
  21. ^ Hutchison, Sharla (2013). "Recoding Consumer Culture: Ester Hernandes, Helena Maria Viramontes, and the Farmworker Cause". Journal of Popular Culture. 46 (5): 973–90. doi:10.1111/jpcu.12063.
  22. ^ Cuevas, T. Jackie (2014). "Engendering a Queer Latin@ time and place in Helena Maria Viramontes' Their dogs came with them". Latino Studies. 12: 27–43. doi:10.1057/lst.2014.7. S2CID 147126042.
  23. ^ Munoz, Alicia (2013). "Articulating a Geography of Pain: Metaphor, Memory, and Movement in Helena Maria Viramontes's "Their Dogs Came with Them"". MELUS. 38 (2): 24–38. doi:10.1093/melus/mlt004. JSTOR 42001220. S2CID 153801468.
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