This book takes as its starting point the boom femenino or the explosion in publishing by women
in Mexico since the 1980s. Powerful changes in women's roles in Mexico over the last three
decades have resulted in women occupying a position of profound ambivalence with regard to the
processes of modernisation. The boom femenino constitutes an integral part of this process of
change. By incorporating a variety of critical approaches within a feminist framework the
author argues that Mexican women writers participate in a crucial project of unsettling
dominant discourses as they strive for new ways of capturing the ambivalent position of the
Mexican women in their texts. The author offers close readings of work by Silvia Molina Sara
Sefchovich Susana Págano Brianda Domecq Guadalupe Loaeza and Rosamaría Roffiel. She also
considers the reactions to and reception of best-selling author Angeles Mastretta with an
assessment of the different vested interests in the world of literature including those of
critics writers readers and publishers.