Description
Poetry. Latinx Studies. Edited by José Kozer, Paul E. Nelson, and Thomas Walton. Translated by Alejandro Carrillo and Dana Nelson. This collaboration, spawned by two previous anthologies, includes the Spanish language poets of the Neobarroco school, as organized by José Kozer, a Cuban Neobarroco poet, together with poets from the Cascadia bioregion, arranged by Paul E. Nelson, founder of the Seattle Poetics Lab (SPLAB) and Thomas Walton, editor-in-chief of Pageboy Magazine, Seattle, WA. Contributors include Carmen Berenguer, Marosa Di Giorgio, Roberto Echavarren, Eduardo Espina, Reynaldo Jiménez, Tamara Kamenszain, José Kozer, Pedro Marqués de Armas, Maurizio Medo, Néstor Perlongher, Soleida Ríos, Roger Santiváñeaz, and Raúl Zurita, Stephen Collis, Elizabeth Cooperman, Sarah de Leeuw, Claudia Castro Luna, Nadine Maestas, Peter Munro, Paul E. Nelson, John Olson, Shin Yu Pai, Clea Roberts, Cedar Sigo, Matthew Trease and Thomas Walton.
"MAKE IT TRUE MEETS MEDUSARIO brings together poets from divergent languages, cultures, and aesthetics to create a...conversation...a fertile meeting place for ongoing ideas about poetry that might trouble the all too-easy academic labels and the subsequent segregation those aesthetic and political divisions cause within the larger, global poetry community."—Matthew Trease, from the Introduction
"MAKE IT TRUE MEETS MEDUSARIO resides mostly in its 'meeting'—the acquaintance made between poetries, poets, languages, and experience particular to the very-western lands and seas of the Americas—Cascadian and 'Latin American'—one speaking the other in fresh understanding and harmony, through strangeness and pleasure. This anthology is the home we've been looking for, the interesting facts of poetic imagination through the magic of translation. Enriched by an introductory, contextualizing essay by Matt Trease and a concluding essay on the poetics of the Latin American Neo-Baroque by José Kozer, this anthology is a dignified counter-weight to the habit of polarities and divisions."—Sharon Thesen
"The poet George Stanley's concept of Aboutism—that poems be about something—is an important notion when all else seems 'to fall apart.' Poetry is the act of making a world, impossible as it is, to somehow cohere with meaning. What this anthology brings us are poets in that attempt—bold, open, and alive to say something that beautifully translates us to a borderless world."—Barry McKinnon
Author Bio
José Kozer, was born in Havana. He has lived in the USA since 1960. He taught at Queens College (CUNY) from 1965 to 1997 and then retired in Hallendale, Florida. He is the author of some one hundred books of poetry, including TOKONOMA (Shearsman Books, 2014), ANIMA (Shearsman Books, 2011), and STET: SELECTED POEMS (Junction Press, 2006). He is also author of a couple of prose, and has been translated into many languages and studied extensively in dissertations in U.S. universities. In 2013 he received the Pablo Neruda Award from the Chilean government and in 2017 became a Montgomery Fellow.
Author City: USA