Desert Blood

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Desert Blood, a book by Alicia Gaspar De Alba, is considered to be a mystery novel that covers a seventeen year crime wave. Specifically, the author has focused on the Juarez femicides issue whereby femicide is defined as the murder of females just because they are women. However, in this case, the Juarez victims are the poor and young Mexican females that were murdered because they were poor. The protagonist of this story is Ivon Villa, a professor that focuses on women studies while the antagonists are Silvia Pasquel, Natalia Stregnard and Zabaleta. This paper will therefore focus on the plot summary and analysis of the novelwhile pinpointing the main parts of the story. The story begins with Ivon Villa, the lesbian professor that lives …show more content…

This implies that young women that work for maquiladoras were assumed to be immoral or lose by the media which in turn implied that it was alright for them to be brutally murdered because they brought it to themselves. Theoretically, the femicide construct shows a social phenomenon which led to the crimes against the young girls and women; they are linked to a patriarchal system which predisposes to a lesser or greater degree that the women should be killed (murdered). Furthermore, this idea may also be extended to the American girls also whereby the authorities blame Irene for becoming kidnapped. Furthermore, the novel’s recurring idea suggests that the Mexicans are deeply involved in religion but they are also chaotic because they are unable to solve the madness caused by the …show more content…

Desert Blood is based on a stereotypical context of the female commodization whereby Rubi, Ximena and Ivon try to fight against the patriarchy so that they can find their individual empowerment at deeper levels. In addition, Ximena and Ivon represent a network empowerment while Rubi represents organizational empowerment. Alba’s novel has given empowerment to the female characters where they manage to break the silence that surrounded the reality of Juarez femicide; this offers a long-awaited voice on the crime as well as the women that needed to speak-up. Alba shows that the women were considered almost worthless and were not considered as the tenable social construct which was maintained and established by the patriarchal

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