Content area

Abstract

This project reevaluates the depiction of animals in Mexican literature authored by women, spanning from the late twentieth century to the present. It explores how sociocultural attitudes shape literary portrayals of animals and highlights early uses of animal figures to address themes such as violence, marginalization, and passivity. These writers often juxtapose the human and animal realms, yet a closer reading reveals efforts to restore animals’ significance within the literary domain. The dissertation demonstrates how contemporary Mexican women writers portray animals with heightened awareness, granting them narrative roles, voices, and agency. Its broader goal is to promote literature that resists the instrumentalization of animals and instead presents them as sentient beings.

Animals have long occupied a meaningful place in literature, and the enduring tradition of bestiaries stands as a testament to their symbolic and narrative power. In Mexican literature, this interest is evident in works such as Juan José Arreola’s Bestiario (1959), Augusto Monterroso’s La oveja negra (1969), and the poetry of Eduardo Lizalde and José Emilio Pacheco. As Javier Hernández Quezada explains in “De risas y bestiarios,” animals often appear in contexts of violence, whether for consumption, labor, entertainment, or ritual. In more favorable depictions, animals serve as companions. Recent scholarship reflects a growing interest in the emotional bonds between animals and humans. Alejandro Lámbarry notes a shift in literature where animals now play central roles, and Hernández Quezada emphasizes their communicative gestures. Yet, little attention has been given to how Mexican women writers present animals as active subjects and vehicles for social critique.

This work initiates a conversation on how women's literature reveals the complexity of animals' lives, their suffering, and the urgency of their protection. As Marian Scholtmeijier argues, women’s fiction often affirms “otherness,” giving voice to the marginalized, both human and nonhuman. Chapter 1 examines violence and captivity. Chapter 2 links animal voices to indigenous resistance in Chiapas. Chapter 3 critiques machismo, highlighting how women’s care for animals becomes an act of mutual liberation. Chapter 4 explores motherhood as a cross-species bond, showing how even insects shape identity and challenge normative views of the female body.

Details

1010268
Literature indexing term
Title
Ecofeminismo: La presencia de los animales en la narrativa contemporánea de mujeres mexicanas
Alternate title
Ecofeminism: The Presence of Animals in Contemporary Mexican Women’s Narratives
Number of pages
224
Publication year
2025
Degree date
2025
School code
0031
Source
DAI-A 86/11(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
9798315732846
Committee member
Cortínez, Veronica; Marturano, Jorge; Derby, Lauren
University/institution
University of California, Los Angeles
Department
Spanish 0882
University location
United States -- California
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
Spanish
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
32043102
ProQuest document ID
3206402823
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/em-ecofeminismo-la-presencia-de-los-animales-en/docview/3206402823/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Database
ProQuest One Academic