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Your daily dose of Chicano poetry

"I write poems on walls that crumble and fall
I talk to shadows that sleep and go away crying.”

Luis Omar Salinas (1937–2008)

PBS American Experience: We Shall Remain

April 14, 2009

Five 90- minute documentaries spanning three hundred years tell the story of pivotal moments in U.S. history from the Native American perspective.

“We were about to be obliterated culturally. Our spiritual way of life, our entire way of life was about to be stamped out. Every tribe in this country has a time of horror when they were confronted by the invader.”

PBS American Experience presents WE SHALL REMAIN, a groundbreaking mini-series and provocative multi-media project that establishes Native history as an essential part of American history. WE SHALL REMAIN premieres April 13, 2009 on PBS. Check local listings.

Kiko and the Lavender Moon

April 10, 2009

I saw this over at the Tex[t]-Mex Galleryblog the other day and realized this place was also seriously lacking in the Los Lobos category.

César Vallejo poetry

April 9, 2009

Find Ten César Vallejo poems HERE

I stayed on to warm up the ink in which I drown
and to listen to my alternative cavern,
tactile nights, abstracted days…


poetry surfing

April 9, 2009

1.

La Bloga’s Lisa Alvarado has a very cool list of quotes on poetry, poetry books and favorite poems in honor of National Poetry Month HERE

2.

Below, Naomi Quiñonez, author of Sueno de Colibri/Hummingbird Dream and The Smoking Mirror reads at the Achiote Press Reading at UC Berkeley. [Thanks to poet Oscar Bermeo for this link, and for bringing the poetry of Nina Serrano to my attention.]

3.

“Poets in San Francisco”

(A legend about Anais Nin and Lawrence Ferlinghetti)

by Nina Serrano

It feels good to write poems in San Francisco

But it would be better if someone

wanted to read listen and talk about poems

in San Francisco.

There is a place where poets meet and love each other

Once I thought it was San Francisco

but when I got there their coffee houses turned into dress stores.

I think the place where poets meet

lies in an inner space between

The ribs the lungs and hurting loneliness.

A poet fills his bags with rose petals

and empties it on the head

of another poet.

Her hair is full of petals.

There love poems rhymed and metered bloom

and in that moment of raining flowers

is the place I want to be.


Eight Chicana poets every reader should know

April 7, 2009
  1. Ana Castillo
    castillo_ana
    A self-described “Chicana protest poet,” Castillo’s work explores the meaning of Xicanisma and deals with issues of race, gender, sexuality, patriarchy, oppression and religion. Her books of poetry include: I Ask the Impossible, My Father Was a Toltec, Women Are Not Roses, The Invitation, and Otro Canto.
    Read Castillo’s poem Coatlicue’s Legacy HERE.
  2. Lorna Dee Cervantes
    Known for her use of vivid language and imagery, Cervantes’ work often addresses racism, feminism and politics, as well as the poet’s relationship to words. Her debut collection Emplumada earned the American Book Award in 1982. Other books include: From the Cables of Genocide: Poems on Love and Hunger, Drive: The First Quartet
  3. Sandra Cisneros
    Cisneros’ feelings of alienation in her early years, especially in academics, was at the root of her finding her voice as a poet and writer. Since then she’s “become the representative Chicana in the reconstruction of the [literary] canon.” Her books of poetry include Loose Woman, My Wicked Wicked Ways, The Rodrigo Poems, and Bad Boys.
  4. Alicia Gaspar de Alba
    Also known as a scholar and historian, Gaspar de Alba’s interests range from pop culture and border studies, to gender, sexuality and Chicano/a art. But as stated at her website, “Alicia considers herself a writer primero que nada.” Gaspar de Alba is Chair and Professor of Chicano Studies at UCLA. Her books include La Llorona on the Longfellow Bridge: poetry y otras movidas, Beggar on the Cordoba Bridge, and a collection of poems in Three Times A Woman: Chicana Poetry.
  5. Angela de Hoyos
    Often cited as one of the first Chicana poets in the Chicano literary renaissance movement, de Hoyos poetry is highly political and addresses the social circumstances of the Chicano. Her books include Woman Woman, Selecciones, Poems/Poemas, Chicano poems from the Barrio, Arise Chicano!: and other poems.
  6. Demetria Martinez
    A columnist, social activist, journalist and essayist, Martinez is drawn to issues of immigration, women’s rights, and spirituality. Her books of poetry include Turning, Breathing Between the Lines, and The Devil’s Workshop.
  7. Carmen Tafolla
    A master of bilingual code-switching, much of Tafolla’s poetry is autobiographical in nature and explores the world of Tex-Mex barrios. Much of her work, she says, is dictated by “ancestors whispering over my shoulder.” Her book of poetry, Sonnets to Human Beings, received the First Prize in the Poetry Division of the UCI National Literary Competition. Other books are Sonnets and Salsa, Sonnets to Human Beings, and Get Your Tortillas Together.
  8. Alma Villanueva
    The sanctity of female community is a common thread in Villanueva’s writings, as well as is the longing for voice and the pursuit to be heard. This likely comes from the experience of living through a difficult childhood. Villanueva also explores identity, race, gender, authenticity, nature, language, myth, the personal and political. Her books of poetry include Vida, Desire, and most recently, Soft Chaos.

    I’m sure there are many more! Any suggestions?