Undocumentaries, Rosa Alcala

Undocumentaries

Rosa Alcala

Publisher: Shearsman Books
PubDate: 2/15/2010
ISBN: 9781848610729
Binding: PAPERBACK
Price: $15.00
Quantity Available: 0
Pages: 86
 

Poetry. Latino/Latina Studies. "If poetic episodes can act as gauges of social role-playing and role-disruption, what might lie 'outside' the roles 'we' 'inhabit?' What remains undocumented, but hardly silent? What are the sensed and projected traces of 'identity' that are ideologically eviscerated, and minimally verifiable? Rosa Alcalá calls up a most magical theater when exploring these quandaries. The tipping (flash) points she constructs continuously build up toward the (touched, handled, engaged) experiential moment, all the while resisting an object-status art. This is a poetics that's prologue + epilogue to incidence, and never the 'it' itself. Sweet tin on tawny brass, flesh-toned, radio-worthy"—Rodrigo Toscano.

Author Hometown: EL PASO, TX USA



About the author: Rosa Alcalá is the author of two chapbooks, Some Maritime Disasters This Century (Belladonna, 2003) and Undocumentary (Dos Press, 2008). Her work appears in the anthology The Wind Shifts: New Latino Poetry (University of Arizona Press, 2007), and in journals such as Mandorla, CHAIN, Barrow Street, Tarpaulin Sky, and The Brooklyn Rail. Alcalá has also translated poetry by Cecilia Vicuna, Lourdes Vazquez, and Lila Zemborain, among others. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Brown University, and a PhD in English from the State University of New York at Buffalo. Born and raised in Paterson, New Jersey, she currently resides in El Paso, Texas, where she teaches in the Department of Creative Writing and Bilingual MFA Program at the University of Texas at El Paso. UNDOCUMENTARIES (Shearsman Books, 2010) is Rosa Alcalá's first full-length collection of poetry.



“Rosa Alcalá, originally from Paterson, N.J., is a true daughter of W.C. Williams with a distinct, gutsy, and penetrating identity twining a public poeisis with her own luminous particulars. I know of no one else writing such poems that cut into and reenact the ‘plebeian’ with such personal force, eloquence, and skill. ‘The syntax of worry rewrites cellular codes’ she writes and then proceeds to investigate and expose the Industrial Age and its ‘genetic drifts.’ A worker is ‘fighting like a girl for gloves,’ a kind of child’s cognitive dissonance documents improperly stored chemicals, ‘the deep sleep of field hands’ stirs memory as does the more current and common ‘paycheck clean of union dues.’ UNDOCUMENTARIES is Archive made Poetry. ‘Factory is both fact and act and/mere letters away from face/and story...’ Alcalá’s imagination and language disarmingly penetrate and extend these powerful devices and activating signals. The face we see is hers and our culture's own. I celebrate this book.”
—Anne Waldman

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