Cascadia Poetics LAB
Poetry Postcard Fest
Watershed Press
Cascadian Prophets Podcast
Cascadia Poetry Festival 8

Bilingual Poetry Anthology Launch

May 4, 2019
Ryukan

Cover of the bilingual poetry anthology Make it True meets MedusarioI am delighted to invite you to the launch of a new poetry anthology with all poems in English and Spanish. Make it True meets Medusario is a mash-up of our Cascadia poetry anthology of 2015: Make it True: Poetry From Cascadia and Medusario, an anthology in Spanish of Latin American poets of the neobarroco school.

The new book is Make it True meets Medusario and was co-edited by José Kozer, Thomas Walton and your humble narrator.The two launches is will be:

Friday, May 10, 2019, 7pm
Cascadia Poetry Festival
801 5th St.
Anacortes, WA

&

Sunday, May 12, 2019, 3pm
Elliott Bay Book Company
1521 10th Ave, Seattle, WA

Thomas Walton, José Kozer, Nadine Maestas, your humble narrator, Elizabeth Cooperman are among those contributing poets scheduled to appear and there will be Q&A after. The Seattle launch is supported by Poets & Writers, Humanities WA, 4Culture, the Seattle Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs and Arts WA. ArtsWA and Humanities WA are supporting the Anacortes launch.

 

Matt Trease has written a brilliant introduction which puts it all in perspective. An excerpt:

 

Seattle Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs

The starting point was envisaged as a bringing together of
the poetry communities represented by two earlier anthologies:
Medusario: Muestra de poesía latinoamericana (Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1996), an anthology of Latin American Neobarroco poets that Kozer had co-edited and Make It True: Poetry from Cascadia (Leaf Press, 2015), a bioregional poetry anthology of which Nelson was a co-editor. In the mid-1990s, Medusario brought together a generation of Latin American poets who had been breaking with the work of forebearers like Pablo Neruda and Ernesto Cardenal, and instead drew a lineage that reflected more the neo-baroque tendencies of Cuban poet José Lezama Lima and Brazilian proto-concretist Haroldo De Campos. Much like Donald Allen’s groundbreaking New American Poetry did for post-war American poets, Medusario established a new potential lineage for Spanish and Portuguese speaking poets that included much of the poly-vocal and paratactic experiments of high Modernism along with the meter and imagery of English Metaphysical poets and the bards of the Spanish Golden Century Baroque… The neo-baroque,
according to Kozer, “does not fear detritus and garbage. It exalts the pestilential and decayed, and never presents reality in black and white.” However, it is not simply chaotic for chaos’ sake. To read it requires an adjustment, “a deep-sea diver-like immersion in a milieu where gravitation changes constantly” and in which you “have to breathe differently: more asthmatically.”

Make It True by contrast presented a much more fractured sense of aesthetics and lineage, and less of a clean break from the predominate US traditions. Some of the poets who were included come through the Whitman/Dickinson (and later Lowell/Bishop) camps, focusing on the authority of lyric self-expression, while others more clearly gravitate toward the post-modern and avant-garde, building on the work of Stein and Pound/Williams, and later Olson, Duncan, Levertov, Ginsberg et al, treating the self as multiple, complex, and its expressions as limited perspectives that can only reflect reality in the mosaic…

Huge thanks to Lauren Grosskopf for publishing this book.

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 Jose 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 is poets in that attempt – bold, open, and alive to say something that  beautifully translates us to a borderless world.

– Barry McKinnon, author of “In the Millennium” and “Gone South”.

 

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

dashed cool colors line

You May Also Like

Andrew Schelling on Forests, Temples, Glacial Rivers

Andrew Schelling on Forests, Temples, Glacial Rivers

Sanskrit translations, a deep bioregional sense of place and homages to dead (mostly) poet friends makes Andrew Schelling’s new book a compelling distillation of subjects he’s been tracking for over 40 years. Author of “Tracks Along The Left Coast: Jaime D’Angulo & Pacific Coast Culture” and “From the Arapaho Songbook” and many other titles, he lives in the mountains outside of Boulder, Colorado, and teaches poetry and Sanskrit at Naropa University. The new book is Forests, Temples and Glacial Rivers, published by Empty Bowl.

Winter in America (Again Reading at Seattle University

Winter in America (Again Reading at Seattle University

Join us in marking the publication of Winter in America (Again: Poets Respond to 2024 with a reading from some of the contributing poets and editors. The reading will take place February 4, 2025, 7 P.M. PST at the Seattle University Sinegal Center for Science and...

Winter in America (Again Poets Respond to the Nov 2024 Election

Winter in America (Again Poets Respond to the Nov 2024 Election

In the call, we stated: “We are looking for words that come from thoughtful reflection and compassion for the loss we feel for ourselves and this country. (Please no screeds.)” Still, we got many poems that were filled with righteous anger, on which we passed. The book features many poems that offer suggestions, pathways and even self-care tips for the new Winter in America. That very phrase “Winter in America” comes from Gil Scott-Heron, and was used by the editors as a sort-of invocation to Gil’s spirit and legacy. I