Women’s Tales from the New Mexico WPA: La Diabla a Pie

$17.95

by Tey Diana Rebolledo and María Teresa Márquez

ISBN: 978-1-55885-312-6
Publication Date: November 31, 2000
Bind: Paperback
Pages: 512

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At the height of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the administration of U. S. President Franklin Roosevelt instituted a Federal Writers Project as part of the larger Works Progress Administration (WPA), massive national undertakings aimed at getting the nation back to work. Many people participated in compiling a series of state-by-state guides to the country. Other writers’ projects included the gathering of folk songs and oral narratives by still-living ex-slaves.

New Mexico was among the states participating in this effort, and the project workers there included two women interviewers, Lou Sage Batchen and Annette Hesch Thorp, who in their work placed particular emphasis upon gathering Hispanic women’s stories, or cuentos. The two interviewed many native ancianos, gathering folktales as well as capturing narratives and gleaning vivid details of a way of life now long disappeared. Professors Tey Diana Rebolledo and María Teresa Márquez have combed through long-lost archives to recover these invaluable first-hand accounts, and have prefaced the whole with an introduction delving into some of the problematic cultural issues surrounding these records.

Named to the Southwest Books of the Year-Best Reading in 2001

“Their effect is profound. The stories provide a soft focus look at a rough way of life where women’s work was unremitting… I couldn’t help but marvel at the everyday details of an extinct world.”—National Public Radio

TEY DIANA REBOLLEDO, Professor of Spanish at the University of New Mexico, is the author of Women Singing in the Snow: A Cultural Analysis of Chicana Literature and co-editor of books including Infinite Divisions: An Anthology of Chicana Literature and Las Mujeres Hablan: An Anthology of Nuevo Mexicana Writers. In 1997 she received the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies (NACCS) Scholar Award.

MARÍA TERESA MÁRQUEZ is Associate Professor at the University of New Mexico’s Center for Southwest Research. Among her other activities, she founded and moderates ChicleNet, a Internet-based discussion network devoted to Chicano literature.