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I Offer My Heart as a Target / Ofrezco mi corazón como una diana
Paz Prize for Poetry
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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October 21, 2019
In the introduction to this piercing and timely exploration of gender, violence, and social justice, novelist, poet, and critic Rigoberto González writes: “The survivor speaks her truth, or rather, writes her way to truth as an avenue of expression.” As the book unfolds, readers witness the role of language in creating truth from a variety of aesthetic vantages, ranging from the philosophical to the image-driven: “To smoke in another language causes a cancer that spreads; first the lips, then the tongue,” Paz explains in “Diaspora of Words.” Throughout, she calls attention to language as a reason for those in power to exclude, and effectively disenfranchise, those individuals beneath them. Yet language also appears as a source of understanding, connection, and community: “We went to live to indulge the enemy/ to resist nights of storms and orphanhood to hear the silence of the lips/ sealed by the ignorance of the language.” To understand others, individuals must first learn how they organize, structure, and understand the world around them through language, Paz suggests. “Against all prognoses,/ we survive,” she proclaims in this moving book that, with Schimel’s skillful translation, highlights resilience in the face of oppression.
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December 15, 2019
An award-winning and widely anthologized poet, Paz is the author of several Spanish-language poetry collections, and this bilingual edition won the Paz Prize for Poetry, selected by Rigoberto Gonz�lez (What Drowns the Flowers in Your Mouth, 2018). In her powerfully honest verses, Paz explores what it means to be born a U.S. citizen on the island of Puerto Rico, to live with a complexion that allows her to pass for white, and to struggle against the misogyny that runs rampant in both English- and Spanish-speaking cultures. Paz is attuned to the political moment and her literary lineage: "#Me / You / Her Too" confronts an arduous reality behind the popular hashtag: "They don't understand that nobody / taught us to escape / from those who we love dearly." Drawing on Puerto Rican poet Angelamar�a D�vila and Mexican maestro Octavio Paz, Paz inverts the words of the latter ("I am a man: I endure little / and the night is enormous"), as her speaker proclaims: "I am a woman: I endure much / and the day is short."(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران