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Barrio Dreams: Selected Plays
Contributor(s): Wood, Silviana (Author), Cantú, Norma Elia (Editor), Urquijo-Ruiz, Rita E. (Editor)
ISBN: 0816532478     ISBN-13: 9780816532476
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
OUR PRICE:   $23.70  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: March 2016
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Drama | American - General
- Drama | Women Authors
Dewey: 812.6
LCCN: 2015032997
Series: Camino del Sol
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 5.9" W x 8.9" (1.10 lbs) 376 pages
Themes:
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
During the advent of Chicano teatro, dozens of groups sprang up across the country in Chicano/a communities. Since then, teatristas have been leading voices in the creation and production of plays touching minds and hearts that galvanize audiences to action.

Barrio Dreams is the first book to collect the work of one of Arizona's foremost teatristas, playwright Silviana Wood. During her decades-long involvement in theater, Wood forged a reputation as a playwright, actor, director, and activist. Her works form a testimonio of Chicana life, steeped in art, politics, and the borderlands. Wood's plays challenge, question, and incite women to consider their lot in life. She ruptures stereotypes and raises awareness of social issues via humor and with an emphasis on the use of the physical body on stage.

The play Una vez, en un barrio de sue os . . . offers a glimpse into familiar terrain--the barrio and its dwellers--in three actos. In Amor de hija, a fraught mother-daughter relationship in contemporary working-class Arizona is dealt an additional blow as the family faces Alzheimer's disease. In the tragedy A Drunkard's Tale of Melted Wings and Memories, and in the trilingual (Spanish, English, and Yaqui) tragicomedy Yo, Casimiro Flores, characters love, live, die, travel through time and space, and visit the afterlife. And in Anhelos por Oaxaca, a grandfather travels back in time through flashbacks, as he and his grandson travel through homelands from Arizona to Oaxaca.

Part of Wood's genius is the way she portrays life in what Gloria Anzald a called "el mundo zurdo," that space inhabited by the people of color, the poor, the female, and the outsiders. It is a place for the atravesados, the odd, the different, those who do not fit the mainstream. The people who inhabit Wood's plays are common folk--janitors, mothers, grandmothers, and teenagers--hardworking people who, in one way or another, have made their way in life and who embody life in the barrio.