Department of Studies in Drama and Pre-1800 English Literature, University of Łódź
Abstract
Chicana literary work is predominantly characterized by poetry. Lyrical poetic phrases are
interwoven into Chicanas’ short stories, novels, theoretical, and critical essays. Why poetry?
What is distinct about poetry as a literary genre or the process of writing poetry that
facilitates Chicanas’ self-expression? Various Chicana writers refer to the process of writing
poetry as essential to the (trans)formation of identity and society. Poetry allows Chicanas to
transform their own identities and to re-define the contours of the world by creating a new or
distinct reality from which to act. Collectively, Chicana writers produce a corpus of literary
work that is characterized by the commingling of poetry, theory, and criticism. In this article I
illustrate that these three phenomena are inextricably linked and that theoretical and critical
essays written by and about Chicanas often grow out of and through their more creative,
poetic literary work. My analysis focuses primarily on two Chicana authors, Pat Mora and Ana
Castillo, and examines how their poetry exemplifies and contextualizes some of their abstract
claims and critical theories, as well as how the blending of poetry, theory, and criticism
functions as a powerful tool to create socio-political change both in the academy and beyond