In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family
Elsie Martinez Trujillo Alcaraz, 'Naunny' to her grandson and communication scholar Nick Trujillo, was a working class woman, daughter of New Mexico Hispanos, and eventually the resident of a Los Angeles nursing home. She becomes the focal point for Trujillo's experimental ethnography of family relations, aging, and ethnic identity throughout the twentieth century. Collecting narratives of his grandmother's life, Trujillo learns how family members use stories to define the family's sense of itself and create collective views on intergenerational relations, social history, gender, class, and ethnicity. Through these stories, family photos, and his own recollections, supplemented with Elsie's letters and journal entries, the author is able to explore topics often ignored in life histories of the elderly—sexuality, body image, eating disorders, marital discord, mobility patterns, racial prejudice, and interactions with the health care system. Trujillo's presentation brings Naunny's humor, liveliness, and generosity alive for scholars and students alike and provides a vivid portrait of being Hispanic and female in the 20th century American west.
1111874952
In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family
Elsie Martinez Trujillo Alcaraz, 'Naunny' to her grandson and communication scholar Nick Trujillo, was a working class woman, daughter of New Mexico Hispanos, and eventually the resident of a Los Angeles nursing home. She becomes the focal point for Trujillo's experimental ethnography of family relations, aging, and ethnic identity throughout the twentieth century. Collecting narratives of his grandmother's life, Trujillo learns how family members use stories to define the family's sense of itself and create collective views on intergenerational relations, social history, gender, class, and ethnicity. Through these stories, family photos, and his own recollections, supplemented with Elsie's letters and journal entries, the author is able to explore topics often ignored in life histories of the elderly—sexuality, body image, eating disorders, marital discord, mobility patterns, racial prejudice, and interactions with the health care system. Trujillo's presentation brings Naunny's humor, liveliness, and generosity alive for scholars and students alike and provides a vivid portrait of being Hispanic and female in the 20th century American west.
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In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family

In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family

by Nick Trujillo
In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family

In Search of Naunny's Grave: Age, Class, Gender and Ethnicity in an American Family

by Nick Trujillo

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Overview

Elsie Martinez Trujillo Alcaraz, 'Naunny' to her grandson and communication scholar Nick Trujillo, was a working class woman, daughter of New Mexico Hispanos, and eventually the resident of a Los Angeles nursing home. She becomes the focal point for Trujillo's experimental ethnography of family relations, aging, and ethnic identity throughout the twentieth century. Collecting narratives of his grandmother's life, Trujillo learns how family members use stories to define the family's sense of itself and create collective views on intergenerational relations, social history, gender, class, and ethnicity. Through these stories, family photos, and his own recollections, supplemented with Elsie's letters and journal entries, the author is able to explore topics often ignored in life histories of the elderly—sexuality, body image, eating disorders, marital discord, mobility patterns, racial prejudice, and interactions with the health care system. Trujillo's presentation brings Naunny's humor, liveliness, and generosity alive for scholars and students alike and provides a vivid portrait of being Hispanic and female in the 20th century American west.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759115804
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 02/16/2004
Series: Ethnographic Alternatives
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 184
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Nick Trujillo is professor of communication studies at California State University, Sacramento.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 The Family Historian
Chapter 2 A Lifetime of Work, A Lifetime of Poverty
Chapter 3 Sex and the Single Grandma
Chapter 4 Serving Us Proudly and Giving Us Everything
Chapter 5 When Naunny Became a Mexican
Chapter 6 A Frail, Old Woman
Chapter 7 One Last Gasp
Chapter 8 The Search Continues
Chapter 9 Appendix: Studying Naunny
Chapter 10 Notes
Chapter 11 References
Chapter 12 About the Author
Chapter 13 Index
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