Letter to El Corno Emplumado
Title | Letter to El Corno Emplumado PDF eBook |
Author | Robert Bonazzi |
Publisher | |
Pages | 4 |
Release | 1967 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Letter
Title | Letter PDF eBook |
Author | Kirby Congdon |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 1962 |
Genre | Corno emplumado = The plumed horn |
ISBN |
Congdon solicits subscriptions for "El Corno Emplumado."
El Corno emplumado
Title | El Corno emplumado PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 212 |
Release | 1969 |
Genre | Literature, Modern |
ISBN |
El Corno emplumado
Title | El Corno emplumado PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 578 |
Release | 1969 |
Genre | Mexican literature |
ISBN |
El Corno Emplumado
Title | El Corno Emplumado PDF eBook |
Author | Alan R. Davison |
Publisher | |
Pages | 124 |
Release | 1994 |
Genre | Corno emplumado |
ISBN | 9780964357600 |
I Never Left Home
Title | I Never Left Home PDF eBook |
Author | Margaret Randall |
Publisher | Duke University Press |
Pages | 240 |
Release | 2020-03-13 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1478007613 |
In 1969, poet and revolutionary Margaret Randall was forced underground when the Mexican government cracked down on all those who took part in the 1968 student movement. Needing to leave the country, she sent her four young children alone to Cuba while she scrambled to find safe passage out of Mexico. In I Never Left Home, Randall recounts her harrowing escape and the other extraordinary stories from her life and career. From living among New York's abstract expressionists in the mid-1950s as a young woman to working in the Nicaraguan Ministry of Culture to instill revolutionary values in the media during the Sandinista movement, the story of Randall's life reads like a Hollywood production. Along the way, she edited a bilingual literary journal in Mexico City, befriended Cuban revolutionaries, raised a family, came out as a lesbian, taught college, and wrote over 150 books. Throughout it all, Randall never wavered from her devotion to social justice. When she returned to the United States in 1984 after living in Latin America for twenty-three years, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service ordered her to be deported for her “subversive writing.” Over the next five years, and with the support of writers, entertainers, and ordinary people across the country, Randall fought to regain her citizenship, which she won in court in 1989. As much as I Never Left Home is Randall's story, it is also the story of the communities of artists, writers, and radicals she belonged to. Randall brings to life scores of creative and courageous people on the front lines of creating a more just world. She also weaves political and social analyses and poetry into the narrative of her life. Moving, captivating, and astonishing, I Never Left Home is a remarkable story of a remarkable woman.
The Poetry of the Americas
Title | The Poetry of the Americas PDF eBook |
Author | Harris Feinsod |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 441 |
Release | 2017 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0190682000 |
"This book narrates exchanges between English- and Spanish-language poets in the American hemisphere from the late 1930s through the rise of the 1960s. It doing so, it contributes to a crucial current of humanistic inquiry: the effort to write a cosmopolitan literary history adequate to the age of globalization. Building on correspondence and manuscripts from collections in Europe and the Americas, the book first traces the material contours of an evolving literary network that exceeds the conventional model of "the two Americas." These relations depend on changing contexts: an era of state-sponsored transnationalism, from the wartime intensification of Good Neighbor diplomacy, to the Cold War cultural policy programs of the Alliance for Progress in the 1960s; a prosperous market for translations of Latin American poetry in the US; and a growing alternative print sphere of bilingual vanguard journals such as El Corno Emplumado (Mexico City, 1962-1969). As the book articulates these histories of exchange, it also theorizes how poets employ the resources of language to transform popular images of the hemisphere from a locus of political conflict into a venue of supranational cultural citizenship. Feinsod describes how inter-Americanism was enacted through diplomatic structures of literary address, multilingual writing, and appeals to a shared indigenous heritage through the genre of the meditation on ruins. By tracing the coevolution of midcentury poetry with the geopolitics of the hemisphere, the book expands existing literary histories of the period through revelatory comparative readings supported by archival findings"--