Acknowledged Legislator: Critical Essays on the Poetry of Martín Espada
Editat de Edward J. Carvalho Contribuţii de Natasha Azank, Andy Croft, Michael Dowdy, Carmen Dolores Hernández, Jeremy Larochelle, Peter Nelson, Camilo Pérez-Bustillo, César A. Salgado, Eric B. Salo, Oscar Sarmiento, Maritza Stanchich, Pauline Uchmanowiczen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 apr 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781611479591
ISBN-10: 1611479592
Pagini: 356
Dimensiuni: 153 x 225 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1611479592
Pagini: 356
Dimensiuni: 153 x 225 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
Key to Espada Title Abbreviations
I. "My Name Is Espada": Author Profile
Martín Espada (1957- )
César A. Salgado
II. "[T]o give history a human face": Historical Memory and Political Resistance
The Republic of Memory: Martín Espada's Local/Global Poetics of Dissent
Maritza Stanchich
Martín Espada: Resistance-Postmodern Poet
Pauline Uchmanowicz
Undoing Macho: Martín Espada's Poetry against Domestic Violence
Oscar Sarmiento
Muse on First: Baseball in the Poetry of Martín Espada
Eric B. Salo (with Edward J. Carvalho)
A Poetry like Ammunition: Martín Espada's Poetics of Resistance and Subversion
Natasha Azank
III. Compañero: Labor Advocacy, Economic Concerns, and Class Consciousness
"Heart of Hunger": Martín Espada and the Poetry of Liberation
Camilo Pérez-Bustillo
"[T]he black braid of names": A Hemispheric Mapping of Martín Espada's Lyric Monuments
Michael Dowdy
From the Inner-City to the Cotton Fields: Living and Working Conditions in Martín Espada's Poetry
Jeremy Larochelle
IV. "The poets must speak": Postscripts and Epilogue
La tumba de Buenaventura Roig: Selected Poems/Poemas selectos Book Review
The Poet Is a Historian, the Poem Is a Record: Interview with Martín Espada
Carmen Dolores Hernández
A Visit to the Bakery: The Martín Espada Papers at Amherst College
Peter Nelson
The Great Bell in Martín Espada's Chest
Andy Croft
Bibliography
Contributors
Preface
Introduction
Key to Espada Title Abbreviations
I. "My Name Is Espada": Author Profile
Martín Espada (1957- )
César A. Salgado
II. "[T]o give history a human face": Historical Memory and Political Resistance
The Republic of Memory: Martín Espada's Local/Global Poetics of Dissent
Maritza Stanchich
Martín Espada: Resistance-Postmodern Poet
Pauline Uchmanowicz
Undoing Macho: Martín Espada's Poetry against Domestic Violence
Oscar Sarmiento
Muse on First: Baseball in the Poetry of Martín Espada
Eric B. Salo (with Edward J. Carvalho)
A Poetry like Ammunition: Martín Espada's Poetics of Resistance and Subversion
Natasha Azank
III. Compañero: Labor Advocacy, Economic Concerns, and Class Consciousness
"Heart of Hunger": Martín Espada and the Poetry of Liberation
Camilo Pérez-Bustillo
"[T]he black braid of names": A Hemispheric Mapping of Martín Espada's Lyric Monuments
Michael Dowdy
From the Inner-City to the Cotton Fields: Living and Working Conditions in Martín Espada's Poetry
Jeremy Larochelle
IV. "The poets must speak": Postscripts and Epilogue
La tumba de Buenaventura Roig: Selected Poems/Poemas selectos Book Review
The Poet Is a Historian, the Poem Is a Record: Interview with Martín Espada
Carmen Dolores Hernández
A Visit to the Bakery: The Martín Espada Papers at Amherst College
Peter Nelson
The Great Bell in Martín Espada's Chest
Andy Croft
Bibliography
Contributors
Recenzii
Poet Martín Espada (b. 1957), who has become synonymous with political activism, is a strong advocate of social equality, often to the detriment of his exposure to a more mainstream audience. This collection offers a comprehensive biographical-critical study of a poet who could be considered the unofficial voice of marginal Latinos. He writes from the perspective of a first generation Nuyorican who experienced overt racial discrimination, and his knowledge of Latin American literature of protest is extensive. In the introductory material, Carvalho provides important biographical information about Espada's humble origins. The child of a 'dark-skinned Puerto Rican' father and a Jewish mother, Espada was born in the projects of New York City. Against all odds, he eventually became a lawyer, and his academic training is often evident in his politically inspired poetry. As the essays in this volume reveal, Espada's poetry reflects the poet's activism as a lawyer who fought for the rights of undocumented Latinos. Another of the book's critical focuses is Espada's pro-independence poetry in support of the construction of a Puerto Rican nation. This volume introduces readers to the complex colonialist history that promoted the imposition of American citizenship on Puerto Ricans. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above; general readers.
While this book is primarily meant for academics, it is accessible to--and should be read by--a much broader audience. . . .Acknowledged Legislator is an important and timely book. . . .Carvalho has done a great service for all of us who care about not just literature, but also how literature can (indeed, should) intersect with community, democracy, and social justice.
If there is a poet that deserves the epithet of 'acknowledged legislator,' it is Martín Espada, who is also an essayist, translator, and political activist. His words lay at the service of social justice, the rights of immigrants, of community as a force, and yes, truth.. Edward J. Carvahlo's compilation honors Martín Espada, his poetry, and his political activism. As most of the essayists engage, one way or another, in biographical accounts of Espada's life, we muse, in admiration, the continuum of Truth in the poet's mouth.
It is a tremendous pleasure to have this ambitious collection of essays about the American poet who, more than any other writer, combines incisive political critique with utopian longing and unforgettable humor. No season should go by without rereading Espada. Now we finally have a collection of critical essays about his work that informs and challenges.
Acknowledged Legislator is the much-merited, if long delayed, tribute of the scholarly academy's recognition of the creative achievement, visionary imagination, and wider sociocultural, public significance of perhaps the most genuinely (Pan) American poet of the contemporary Latino Diaspora.
This is an impressive collection of critical essays on Martín Espada, meticulously edited by Edward J. Carvalho. Acknowledged Legislator fills a gap in the critical literature, providing substantial and authoritative scholarship on an important contemporary poet. In doing so, it offers enlivening arguments on issues of aesthetics, ethics, culture, and on competing claims for contemporary poetry.
While this book is primarily meant for academics, it is accessible to--and should be read by--a much broader audience. . . .Acknowledged Legislator is an important and timely book. . . .Carvalho has done a great service for all of us who care about not just literature, but also how literature can (indeed, should) intersect with community, democracy, and social justice.
If there is a poet that deserves the epithet of 'acknowledged legislator,' it is Martín Espada, who is also an essayist, translator, and political activist. His words lay at the service of social justice, the rights of immigrants, of community as a force, and yes, truth.. Edward J. Carvahlo's compilation honors Martín Espada, his poetry, and his political activism. As most of the essayists engage, one way or another, in biographical accounts of Espada's life, we muse, in admiration, the continuum of Truth in the poet's mouth.
It is a tremendous pleasure to have this ambitious collection of essays about the American poet who, more than any other writer, combines incisive political critique with utopian longing and unforgettable humor. No season should go by without rereading Espada. Now we finally have a collection of critical essays about his work that informs and challenges.
Acknowledged Legislator is the much-merited, if long delayed, tribute of the scholarly academy's recognition of the creative achievement, visionary imagination, and wider sociocultural, public significance of perhaps the most genuinely (Pan) American poet of the contemporary Latino Diaspora.
This is an impressive collection of critical essays on Martín Espada, meticulously edited by Edward J. Carvalho. Acknowledged Legislator fills a gap in the critical literature, providing substantial and authoritative scholarship on an important contemporary poet. In doing so, it offers enlivening arguments on issues of aesthetics, ethics, culture, and on competing claims for contemporary poetry.