Latino poetry: the Library of America anthology
"For nearly 5 centuries, the rich tapestry of Latino poetry has been woven from a wealth of languages and cultures—a "tremendous continental MIXTURAO," as Tato Laviera writes. The Latino poetic imagination has flourished in the U.S., distinguished by its profound engagement with pasts...
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New York, N.Y.
The Library of America
[2024]
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Schriftenreihe: | The Library of America
382 |
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Zusammenfassung: | "For nearly 5 centuries, the rich tapestry of Latino poetry has been woven from a wealth of languages and cultures—a "tremendous continental MIXTURAO," as Tato Laviera writes. The Latino poetic imagination has flourished in the U.S., distinguished by its profound engagement with pasts both historical and mythic; its reckoning with the complexities of language, land, and identity; and its vision of a nation enriched by the stories of immigrants, exiles, refugees, and their descendants. Now, in an unprecedented anthology edited by Rigoberto González, Library of America brings together more than 180 poets whose works testify to the beauty, inventiveness, and power of this vital and expanding tradition. The earliest poems here depict encounters—often violent—between European settlers and Indigenous peoples. Selections of Mexican American corridos and other song forms reveal the deep vernacular and musical roots of Latino poetry. As with all the Spanish-language poems in this anthology, the original texts are paired with English translations, many commissioned for this volume. Poems by notable émigrés in the United States stretching back to the nineteenth century—the Puerto Rican revolutionary Lola Rodríguez de Tió, the Cuban national hero José Martí, and later the Mexican modernist José Juan Tablada—show the global outlook of an art form that transcends borders to explore ideas of home and homeland in provocative ways. Latino poetry’s meteoric rise in the mid-twentieth century is captured in this anthology as never before. The 1960s saw the emergence of the Chicano Movement, whose poets, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, Francisco X. Alarcón, Juan Felipe Herrera, and Lorna Dee Cervantes among them, expressed a radical new sense of cultural pride inspired by Indigenous conceptions of origin... culminates with the most comprehensive survey of 21st-century Latino poetry yet published." "This landmark Latinx poetry collection offers 'a wondrous journey through the passions, the ideas, and the diversity of a people redefining what it means to be American' (Héctor Tobar, Pulitzer Prize winner) Includes more than 180 poets, spanning from the 17th century to today, and presents those poems written in Spanish in the original and in English translation.-- |
Beschreibung: | "Latino Poetry: The Library of America Anthology is the centerpiece of Latino Poetry: Places We Call Home, a national public humanities initiative made possible with support from The National Endowment for the Humanities and Emerson Collective."--Page ix |
Beschreibung: | xxxix, 657 Seiten 21 cm |
ISBN: | 9781598537833 |
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520 | 3 | |a "For nearly 5 centuries, the rich tapestry of Latino poetry has been woven from a wealth of languages and cultures—a "tremendous continental MIXTURAO," as Tato Laviera writes. The Latino poetic imagination has flourished in the U.S., distinguished by its profound engagement with pasts both historical and mythic; its reckoning with the complexities of language, land, and identity; and its vision of a nation enriched by the stories of immigrants, exiles, refugees, and their descendants. Now, in an unprecedented anthology edited by Rigoberto González, Library of America brings together more than 180 poets whose works testify to the beauty, inventiveness, and power of this vital and expanding tradition. The earliest poems here depict encounters—often violent—between European settlers and Indigenous peoples. Selections of Mexican American corridos and other song forms reveal the deep vernacular and musical roots of Latino poetry. As with all the Spanish-language poems in this anthology, the original texts are paired with English translations, many commissioned for this volume. Poems by notable émigrés in the United States stretching back to the nineteenth century—the Puerto Rican revolutionary Lola Rodríguez de Tió, the Cuban national hero José Martí, and later the Mexican modernist José Juan Tablada—show the global outlook of an art form that transcends borders to explore ideas of home and homeland in provocative ways. Latino poetry’s meteoric rise in the mid-twentieth century is captured in this anthology as never before. The 1960s saw the emergence of the Chicano Movement, whose poets, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, Francisco X. Alarcón, Juan Felipe Herrera, and Lorna Dee Cervantes among them, expressed a radical new sense of cultural pride inspired by Indigenous conceptions of origin... culminates with the most comprehensive survey of 21st-century Latino poetry yet published." | |
520 | |a "This landmark Latinx poetry collection offers 'a wondrous journey through the passions, the ideas, and the diversity of a people redefining what it means to be American' (Héctor Tobar, Pulitzer Prize winner) Includes more than 180 poets, spanning from the 17th century to today, and presents those poems written in Spanish in the original and in English translation.-- | ||
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CONTENTS Introduction. I. ANTECEDENTS Seventeenth to Early Twentieth Century FRAY ALONSO GREGORIO DE ESCOBEDO de La Florida: Canto XIX /from La Florida: Canto XIX GASPAR PÉREZ DE VILLAGRÁ de Historia de la Xueva .Mexico / from History of Xov Mexico. MIGUEL DE QUINTANA Jesús. María v José / Jesus, Mary and Joseph. ANONYMOUS de Los Comanches / from The C.oinancljcs. JOSÉ MARÍA HEREDIA Y HEREDIA LOLA RODRIGUEZ DE TIÓ I.a Borinquena / The Song of . JOSE MARTÍ de Versos sencillos / from Simple J?w.c. Amor de ciudad grande / Love in the City. JOSE JUAN TABLADA I laikit seleccionadas / Selected Haiku. 1 una Galante / Galla nt Moon. WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS All the Fancy Things. I he Poet and I lis Poems. SALOMON DE LA SELVA A Song for Wall Street.
xii CONTEXTS II. CORRIDOS AND NOSTALGIA SONGS Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries ANONYMOUS La Indita de Plácida Romero / Little Indian Ballad of Plácida Romero. So ANONYMOUS El Corrido de Gregorio Cortez / The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez. S4 ENRIQUE FRANCO Tres veces mojado / Three Times a Wetback. 92 NOEL ESTRADA En mi Viejo San Juan / In Mv Old San Juan. 96 CHUCHO MONGE Mexico lindo y querido / Mexico Sweet and Beloved 100 RAMITO (FLORENCIO MORALES RAMOS) Que bonita bandera / What a Beautiful Flag. 104 ALEXANDER ABREU Me dicen Cuba / Thev Call Me Cuba. 10S JUAN LUIS GUERRA Ojalá que llueva cafe / Let Us Hope It Rains Cotice. lió III. LATINO ANCESTORS Twentieth Century Latin American JOSÉ DÂVILA SEMPRIT Los Estados Unidos / The United States. 124 EUGENIO FLORIT Los poetas solos de Manhattan / The Lonely Poets of Manhattan. 13S CLEMENTE SOTO VÉLEZ de Caballo de palo·. #3 / from The Wooden Horse: #3 134 de Caballo de palo: #29 / from The Wooden Horse: #29 . 134 JULIA DE BURGOS A Julia de Burgos / To Julia de Burgos. Puerto Rico está en tí / Puerto Rico Is in You. 142
CLARIBEL ALEGRÍA Ars poética / Ars Poética. 144 Carta a un desterrado / Letter to an Exile. 144 ERNESTO CARDENAL Managua 63- pm / Managua 630 pm. 150 Entre tachadas , Among Facades. 152 LOURDES CASAL Para Ana Vcldtord / For Ana Veldford. 154 CECILIA VICUÑA Luvumei , I . 158 Eclipse en Nues a York / Eclipse in New York. 160 EXCILIA SALDANA Danzón inconcluso para Noche e Isla / Unfinished Danzón tor Night and Island. 162 DAISY ZAMORA Cana a una hermana 411c vive en un país lejano / Letter to Me Siner Who Lives in a Foreign Land. 168 50 versos de amor v una confesión no realizada a Presto Cardenal , 50 Love Poems and an Cntultited iMilession to Ernesto Cardenal. 170 Latino AMÉRICO PAREDES The Mexico Texan. 179 RODOLFO "CORKY" GONZALES 1 Am loaqin An Epic Poem. 196-. 181 LALO DELGADO Stupid Атстка. 194 De Corpus a san Antomo. 195 JOSÉ MON TOYA Fl I ome196 RHINA P. ESPAILLAT On Hearing Mx Name Pronounced Correctly, Unexpected., tor Once . 200 Ont he I mp ss;bihtx of Translat
ion. 200
xiv CONTENTS RAÚL R. SALINAS Unitv Vision. 201 JACK AGÜEROS Sonnet for the #6. 203 Sonnet: The History of Puerto Rico. 20; LUIS OMAR SALINAS Ode to the Mexican Experience. 205 That Mv Name Is Omar. 20" ERANK LIMA Oklahoma America. 208 Alligator of Happiness. 210 IV. LET ME TELL YOU WHAT A POEM BRINGS MARJORIE AGOSÍN Lejos / Far Away. 212 La Extranjera / The Foreigner. 214 FRANCISCO X. ALARCÓN Un Beso Is Not a Kiss. 216 In Xóchitl In Cuicatl. 21de De amor oscuro / from Of Dark Lore. 218 MIGUEL ALGARÍN Nuyorican Angel Papo. 220 HIV. 221 ALURISTA sliver. 225 with. 225 JULIA ALVAREZ All-American
Girl. 22" Museo del Hombre. 228 GLORIA ANZALDÚA To live in the Borderlands means you. 229 RANE ARROYO A Chapter from The Book ofLamentations. 231 That Flag. 232 JIMMY SANTIAGO BACA “I love the wind .”. 233 Knowing the Snow Another Way. 233
XV CONTENTS GIANNINA BRASCHI Sm Boricua. 236 A Toast to Di\ ine Madness. 236 ANA CASTILLO Λ Christinas Carol: c. 1976. 237 LORNA DEE CERVANTES Poem lor the Young White Man Who Asked Me Hou 1, an Intelligent, Well-Read Person Could Believe in theWar Between Races. 239 Visions of Mexico While at a Writing Symposium in Port Townsend, Washington. 241 Flatirons. 243 Bananas.244 SANDRA CISNEROS You Bring Out the Mexican in Me. 248 Loose Woman. 250 Instructions lor Mv Funeral. 252 LUCHA CORPI Mexico Mexico. 254 Emil Dickinson Emilv Dickinson. 256 SILVIA CURBELO Between Language and Desire. 258 ANGELA DE HOYOS La gran . . 259 MARTIN ESPADA Colibrí. 261 Alban/a In Praise of I
ocal 100. 262 Flössers and Bullets. 264 I he Republic ot Poctrv. 264 SANDRA MARÍA ESTEVES Mambo ! o\e Poem. 266 Black Notes and "You Do Something Го Me”. 267 DIANA GARCÍA Operan.in Wetback. 190. 269 RICHARD GARCIA Mv Father I |.„UK. 270
RAY GONZALEZ At the Rio Grande Near the End of the Century. 2’2 The Head of Pancho Villa. 23 VICTOR HERNANDEZ CRUZ Latin 8c Soul. 2’4 Trio Los Condes. 2’6 JUAN FELIPE HERRERA Exiles. 2’9 Aly Mother's Coat Is Green.280 The Women Tell Their Stories. 2S1 Let Me Tell You What a Poem Brings. 2S1 The Chaos Beneath Buttons/Acrvlic in Blue. 282 TATO LAVIERA Mixturao. 284 AURORA LEVINS MORALES When I Write Archipelago. 286 JAIME MANRIQUE El fantasma de mi padre en dos paisajes / Mx Father's Ghost in Two Landscapes. 288 Mambo / Mambo. 29? DIONISIO D. MARTINEZ History as a Second Language. 292 PABLO MEDINA The Exile. 29; The Floating Island. 29; ORLANDO RICARDO MENES Doña Flora’s
Hothouse. 29 PAT MORA Now and Then, America. 29“ El Río Grande. 298 Let Us Hold Hands. 29S Prayer to the Saints / Oración a los Santos. 300 JUDITH ORTIZ COFER Because My Mother Burned Her Legs in a Freak Accident. Where You Need to Go. ’02 To Understand El Azul. 304
CONTENTS XVÍi GUSTAVO PÉREZ FIRMAT Last-Mambo-in-Miami. 306 PEDRO PIETRI Puerto Rican Obituary. 307 The Broken English Dream. 315 MIGUEL PINERO A Lower East Side Poem. 320 LEROY V. QUINTANA Etymologies. 322 ALBERTO RÍOS Carlos. Nam. The Vietnam Wall. Rabbits .¡nd Fire . 325 326 327 328 LUIS J. RODRIGUEZ The Monster. 330 Jllforb^ Blues. 331 The Rabbi and the Cholo. 332 LEO ROMERO Ί he Goat" Cry. 335 BENJAMIN ALIRE SAENZ The ίifth Drcam: Bullets and Deserts and Borders. 336 RICARDO SÁNCHEZ canto. 3+0 GARY SOTO
Salt. 3+2 Mexicans Begin Jogging. 3+3 Bulosan, 1935. 3+3 Fresno’s Westside Blues. 3+5 CARMEN TAFOLLA Mujeres del Rebozo Rojo. 3+6 EDWIN TORRES (no . 3+8 LUIS ALBERTO URREA The First lowrider in Heaven. 3+9
CONTENTS xviii ROBERT VASQUEZ At the Rainbow. 34 ALMA LUZ VILLANUEVA Child's Laughter. 44 TINO VILLANUEVA Scene from the Movie (ПАХи46 V. HOWLING AS THEY CAME STEVEN ALVAREZ 1992 / 5th sun / our present. 361 ELOISA AMEZCUA The Witch Reads Me Mv Birthchart. о FRANCISCO ARAGÓN Nicaragua in a Voice. 304 WILLIAM ARCHILA Duke Ellington, Santa Ana, El Salvador, 19’4. to; RICHARD BLANCO Саша Tú / Like You / Like Me. 0' DANIEL BORZUTZKY Let Light Shine Out of Darkness. RAFAEL CAMPO My Voice. BRENDA CÁRDENAS Report from the Temple of Confessions in Old Chicano English. SANDRA Μ. CASTILLO La Fiesta del Globo. ADRIAN CASTRO When Hearing Batí Drums. LISA D. CHAVEZ Manley Hot Springs, Alaska: 1975. CYNTHIA CRUZ Self Portrait. . . . to*
CONTENTS DAVID DOMINGUEZ Mi 1J i st ria. XÎX 381 BLAS FALCONER The Given Account. 383 GINA FRANCO The Line. 385 SUZANNE FRISCHKORN Pool. 387 CARMEN GIMÉNEZ i Llorona Soliloque ). 388 (after Pedro Pietri’s "Puerto Rican Obituary"). 388 ARACELIS GIRMAY Ode to the Watermelon. 391 The Black Maria. 392 KEVIN A. GONZÁLEZ How To Surene die Last American Colony. 395 ROBERTO HARRISON a grotesque ide H panama with cooling shadow. 397 TIM Z. HERNANDEZ Tee Worn 1 hat Feminine Skin. 399 JAVIER O. HUERTA Toward a Portrait of the Undocumented. +01 MAURICE KILWEIN GUEVARA ( learing ( 'liste ms. 4O2 RAINA J. LEÓN Southwest Philadelphia. to88. 403 ADA LIMÓN Notes un i he Below. 404 Cargo. 405 The End
of . . 407 SHERYL LUNA Bone- . 40S MARIPOSA Ode to the Droporican. 4Ю
DEMETRIA MARTINEZ Discovering America. 412 VALERIE MARTÍNEZ from Count. 415 FARID MATUK Talk (“I am Sicilian today . . 417 Talk (“I am Moroccan today . . .”). 418 rachel McKibbens drought (California). 419 MARIA MELENDEZ El Villain. 422 ANDRÉS MONTOYA fresno night.424 JOHN MURILLO Santayana, the Moralist.4-6 MIGUEL MURPHY Love Like Auto-Sodomy.428 URAYOÁN NOEL No Longer Ode / Oda Indebida. 43- DEBORAH PAREDEZ Year of the Dog: Walls and Mirrors. 433 WILLIE PERDOMO Arroz con Son y Clave. 435 We Used to Call It Puerto Rico Rain. 435 MAYRA SANTOS-FEBRES Tinta / Ink. 438 IRE’NE LARA SILVA dieta indígena. 440 VIRGIL SUÁREZ El Exilio. 442 RODRIGO TOSCANO Latínx
Poet. 44+ EMANUEL XAVIER Madre America. 445
CONTENTS XXi VL MY BODY SANG ITS UNDEATH ELIZABETH ACEVEDO La ( Τμιι.ιρ.ι. 449 ANTHONY AGUERO Undetectable Explained to a Primo. 451 ALDO AMPARAN What I sax tt me mother after her father dies is soft. 452 DIANNELY ANTIGUA Golden Shenel with Solstice. 453 GUSTAVO ADOLEO AYBAR Walltloer Mambo. 4$5 DIEGO BAEZ Yaguareté While. 457 OLIVER BAEZ BENDORF M\ Bodv the Haunted House. 460 ROSEBUD BENONI All Palaces Ate Temporäre Palaces. 461 DAVID CAMPOS Lizard Bond. 462 N A T/\ S H A C A R RIZ O S A . . 463 MARCELO HERNANDEZ CASTILLO Y et hack. 466 ANDRESCERVA Hie Distance betweenI use St Mv Language. 468 MAYA CHINCHILLA ( cutral AmericanAmerican. 470 ANTHONY CODY How to I \nji .1 Mexican 1 1848-Present). 472 EDUARDO C. CORRAL In Colorado Me Lather Scoined and Stacked Dishes. 474
Want. 47s
xxii CONTENTS RIO CORTEZ Ars Poética with Mother and Do^.4-6 JOSEPH DELGADO dirty sheets. 4— BLAS MANDEL DE LUNA To Hear the Leaves Sing. 4~9 NATALIE DIAZ Tortilla Smoke: A Genesis. +85 If Eve Side-Stealer Marv Busted Chest Ruled the World 4S1 Postcolonial Love Poem. 4S2 ANGEL DOMINGUEZ Dear Diego,. 4-4'4- CAROLINA EBEID Punctum / Image of an bitifiiàii. 4^' ROBERT FERNANDEZ flags4S0 ARIEL FRANCISCO Along the East River and in the Bronx Young Men Were Singing. 4S" VANESSA JIMENEZ GABB Xunantunich. 4XS JENNIFER GIVHAN Coatlicue Defends, Amongst Others, the Tunguska Event. . 4S9 RODNEY GOMEZ Coatlicue. 491 CYNTHIA GUARDADO Parallel Universe. 492 LAURIE ANN GUERRERO Put Attention.49; LETICIA HERNANDEZ-LINARES Translating the Wash.
494 DARREL ALEJANDRO HOLNES Cristo Negro de Portobclo. 49-
CONTENTS XXÜi JOE JIMENEZ Some nights, I just want to hold a man in my arms because this would make everything better in mv life—. 498 ANTONIO DE JESÚS LÓPEZ Convert Glossary. 499 DAVID TOMAS MARTINEZ The Only Mexican. 501 J. MICHAEL MARTINEZ Lord, Spanglish Me. 503 JASMINNE MENDEZ Machete. 505 YESENIA MONTILLA Maps. 507 JUAN J. MORALES Discovering Pain. 509 ADELA NAJARRO And His Name Is Nixon. $10 JOSÉ OLIVAREZ Mexican American Disambiguation. 512 ALAN PELAEZ LOPEZ "Sick" in America. 514 EMMY PEREZ Laredo Riviera. 515 ANA PORTNOY BRIMMER A hurricane has come and gone./What do we tell our children now ·. 516 GABRIEL RAMIREZ On Realizing I Am Black. 518 JULIAN RANDALL Biracial Ghazal· Whv Everything Ends in Blood. 520 ALEXANDRA LYTTON
REGALADO La Mes.i. su
CONTENTS xxiv YOSIMAR REYES TRE (Mv Revolutionary). 523 ILIANA ROCHA Elegy Composed of a Thousand Voices in a Bottle . 526 JOSÉ ANTONIO RODRÍGUEZ La Migra. 527 Shelter. 527 ROQUE RAQUEL SALAS RIVERA they. 530 if time is queer/and memory is trans/and mv hands hurt in the eold/then. 530 C. T. SALAZAR All the Bones at the Bottom of the Rio Grande. 532 RUTH IRUPÉ SANABRIA Distance. 53+ ERIKA L. SANCHEZ Narco. 535 JACOB SHORES-ARGÜELLO Paraíso. 556 BRANDON SOM Chino53" CHRISTOPHER SOTO The Joshua Tree // Submits Her Name Change. 538 VINCENT TORO Sonata of the Luminous Lagoon. 539 DAN VERA Small Shame Blues. 541 LAURA VILLAREAL Home Is Where the Closet Is. 542 VANESSA ANGÉLICA VILLARREAL A Field of Onions: Brown Study. 54 3 JAVIER ZAMORA El
Salvador. 546
CONTENTS XXV Biographical Notes. 549 Note on the Texts andAcknowledgments. 593 Notes. 615 Index of Titles and First Lines. 645 Index of Poets . 655 |
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The Latino poetic imagination has flourished in the U.S., distinguished by its profound engagement with pasts both historical and mythic; its reckoning with the complexities of language, land, and identity; and its vision of a nation enriched by the stories of immigrants, exiles, refugees, and their descendants. Now, in an unprecedented anthology edited by Rigoberto González, Library of America brings together more than 180 poets whose works testify to the beauty, inventiveness, and power of this vital and expanding tradition. The earliest poems here depict encounters—often violent—between European settlers and Indigenous peoples. Selections of Mexican American corridos and other song forms reveal the deep vernacular and musical roots of Latino poetry. As with all the Spanish-language poems in this anthology, the original texts are paired with English translations, many commissioned for this volume. Poems by notable émigrés in the United States stretching back to the nineteenth century—the Puerto Rican revolutionary Lola Rodríguez de Tió, the Cuban national hero José Martí, and later the Mexican modernist José Juan Tablada—show the global outlook of an art form that transcends borders to explore ideas of home and homeland in provocative ways. Latino poetry’s meteoric rise in the mid-twentieth century is captured in this anthology as never before. The 1960s saw the emergence of the Chicano Movement, whose poets, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, Francisco X. 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id | DE-604.BV050175090 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2025-03-31T18:11:25Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781598537833 |
language | English Spanish |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035510966 |
oclc_num | 1464290555 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-29 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | xxxix, 657 Seiten 21 cm |
publishDate | 2024 |
publishDateSearch | 2024 |
publishDateSort | 2024 |
publisher | The Library of America |
record_format | marc |
series | The Library of America |
series2 | The Library of America |
spelling | González, Rigoberto 1970- (DE-588)130623156 edt Latino poetry the Library of America anthology Rigoberto González, editor New York, N.Y. The Library of America [2024] © 2024 xxxix, 657 Seiten 21 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier The Library of America 382 "Latino Poetry: The Library of America Anthology is the centerpiece of Latino Poetry: Places We Call Home, a national public humanities initiative made possible with support from The National Endowment for the Humanities and Emerson Collective."--Page ix "For nearly 5 centuries, the rich tapestry of Latino poetry has been woven from a wealth of languages and cultures—a "tremendous continental MIXTURAO," as Tato Laviera writes. The Latino poetic imagination has flourished in the U.S., distinguished by its profound engagement with pasts both historical and mythic; its reckoning with the complexities of language, land, and identity; and its vision of a nation enriched by the stories of immigrants, exiles, refugees, and their descendants. Now, in an unprecedented anthology edited by Rigoberto González, Library of America brings together more than 180 poets whose works testify to the beauty, inventiveness, and power of this vital and expanding tradition. The earliest poems here depict encounters—often violent—between European settlers and Indigenous peoples. Selections of Mexican American corridos and other song forms reveal the deep vernacular and musical roots of Latino poetry. As with all the Spanish-language poems in this anthology, the original texts are paired with English translations, many commissioned for this volume. Poems by notable émigrés in the United States stretching back to the nineteenth century—the Puerto Rican revolutionary Lola Rodríguez de Tió, the Cuban national hero José Martí, and later the Mexican modernist José Juan Tablada—show the global outlook of an art form that transcends borders to explore ideas of home and homeland in provocative ways. Latino poetry’s meteoric rise in the mid-twentieth century is captured in this anthology as never before. The 1960s saw the emergence of the Chicano Movement, whose poets, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, Francisco X. Alarcón, Juan Felipe Herrera, and Lorna Dee Cervantes among them, expressed a radical new sense of cultural pride inspired by Indigenous conceptions of origin... culminates with the most comprehensive survey of 21st-century Latino poetry yet published." "This landmark Latinx poetry collection offers 'a wondrous journey through the passions, the ideas, and the diversity of a people redefining what it means to be American' (Héctor Tobar, Pulitzer Prize winner) Includes more than 180 poets, spanning from the 17th century to today, and presents those poems written in Spanish in the original and in English translation.-- Beiträge teilweise Englisch, teilweise Spanisch American poetry / Hispanic American authors Latin American poetry Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd rswk-swf Hispanos (DE-588)4240086-7 gnd rswk-swf Hispanos (DE-588)4240086-7 s Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 s DE-604 The Library of America 382 (DE-604)BV000009606 382 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035510966&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology American poetry / Hispanic American authors Latin American poetry Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd Hispanos (DE-588)4240086-7 gnd The Library of America |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4036774-5 (DE-588)4240086-7 |
title | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology |
title_auth | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology |
title_exact_search | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology |
title_full | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology Rigoberto González, editor |
title_fullStr | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology Rigoberto González, editor |
title_full_unstemmed | Latino poetry the Library of America anthology Rigoberto González, editor |
title_short | Latino poetry |
title_sort | latino poetry the library of america anthology |
title_sub | the Library of America anthology |
topic | American poetry / Hispanic American authors Latin American poetry Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd Hispanos (DE-588)4240086-7 gnd |
topic_facet | American poetry / Hispanic American authors Latin American poetry Lyrik Hispanos |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035510966&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000009606 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gonzalezrigoberto latinopoetrythelibraryofamericaanthology |