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" "Call me a Californio": "
Pearson, Chelsea Leah
Gillman, Susan
Document Type
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Latin Dissertation
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Language of Document
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English
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Record Number
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915038
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Doc. No
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TL6ht3s1tm
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Main Entry
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Pearson, Chelsea Leah
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Title & Author
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"Call me a Californio":\ Pearson, Chelsea LeahGillman, Susan
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College
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UC Santa Cruz
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Date
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2013
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student score
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2013
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Abstract
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This thesis uses translation theory and practice as a new critical framework to revise dominant readings of Helen Hunt Jackson and her novel Ramona (1884). Rather than assuming both author and novel as origin-points of Southern California's "Spanish Revival" tradition, I investigate a less recognized, pre-Anglo, Spanish-language thread of revivalism, the practice of constructing Spanish-influenced identity within the Californio population. Through close analysis of unpublished Spanish-language texts and early Californio testimonios, I read this alternative revivalism as a paradigm of temporal cultural translation: Californio history-and identity-making, traceable within and across time through linguistic terms that carry cultural meaning, both synchronically and diachronically. Reading Jackson's novel through a translational framework, I reconceive her role in these revivalisms not as originator, but as translator-ethnographer, who deploys language and time in Ramona to inscribe an invented Spanish Southern California subject into the region's historical memory.
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Added Entry
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Gillman, Susan
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Added Entry
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UC Santa Cruz
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