Dr. Carlos E.
Cortés is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of California,
Riverside. Since 1990 he has served on
the summer faculty of the Harvard Institutes for Higher Education, since 1995
has served on the faculty of the Summer Institute for Intercultural
Communication, and since 1999 has been an adjunct faculty member of the Federal
Executive Institute.
His most recent
book is his autobiography, Rose
Hill: An Intermarriage before Its Time (Heyday Books, 2012), which traces his upbringing in Kansas City, MO, as the son of a Mexican father and Jewish mother. Other books include The Children Are Watching: How the Media Teach about Diversity and The Making -- and Remaking -- of a
Multiculturalist, published by Teachers College Press.
Cortés is general
editor of the forthcoming Multicultural
America: A Multimedia Encyclopedia (Sage, 2012), Scholar-in-Residence with
Univision Communications, and Creative/Cultural Advisor for Nickelodeon's
Peabody-award-winning children's television series, "Dora the
Explorer," and its sequel, "Go, Diego, Go!," for which he
received the 2009 NAACP Image Award. He
also travels the country performing his one-person autobiographical play, A Conversation with Alana: One Boy's
Multicultural Rite of Passage, while he co-wrote the book and lyrics for the
musical, We Are Not Alone: Tomás Rivera -- A Musical Narrative, which premiered in 2011.
A consultant to
many government agencies, school systems, universities, mass media, private
businesses, and other organizations, Cortés has lectured widely throughout the
United States, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Australia on the implications
of diversity for education, government, private business, and the mass media.
Dr. Cortés kindly
agreed to sit down with La Bloga to discuss his new memoir, Rose Hill.
DANIEL OLIVAS: When did you decide to write the story of
your parents and their intermarriage?
CARLOS CORTÉS: About ten or twelve years ago, at the
request of my daughter Alana, I began writing family sketches -- mini-bios, recollections,
anecdotes, memorable incidents –- in the form of letters to her. Later I assembled them in rough chronological
form and filled in narrative gaps. Before
I realized it, I had written a sprawling, disjointed 600-page combination
family history and autobiography.
At first this was
just for the family. But as I began to
test the waters by reading excerpts to others, the enthusiastic reactions
convinced me that I should try turning it into a book.
A theatre director
came to one of my readings and, afterward, suggested that I adapt it into a
one-man play. I did and the play, “A
Conversation with Alana: One Boy’s Multicultural Rite of Passage,” which I now perform
all over the country, has become quite popular, particularly at conferences and
universities. More than 120 performances
to date.
Performing the
play and holding post-performance discussions with audiences helped clarify
that intermarriage and its impact on me provided the narrative drive of my
story. When I went back to the
manuscript, I transformed it from a sprawling 600 pages to a tight 225 pages by
focusing on that core narrative of ethnic, religious, class, and linguistic
crossfire.
DO: As a historian, did you have difficulty with a subject matter that was
so close to your heart and where you played a role?
CC: I suppose it might be more dramatic if I said that writing about my
family was difficult for me. But that’s
not true. In fact, telling my story was
liberating. The story became more
meaningful as I performed, wrote, and discussed it with others, including
audiences at the play.
My major challenge
was the issue of personal privacy. What
things should I omit, if including them would cross the line into unduly
exposing other people’s lives, particularly when it wasn’t essential to the
narrative?
DO: Why did you name your book, Rose
Hill, after the place where your parents were buried? Did you have another title in mind before
choosing this one?
CC: At first I called it Letters to
Alana because I wrote the sketches as letters to my daughter. But when I began to shape it into a book, this
seemed too much like a gimmick.
I ultimately ended
up with Rose Hill because the
cemetery played such a dramatic role in our family’s life both as a source of intercultural
conflict and as a magnet for reconciliation and redemption. In the play, my mother’s burial at Rose Hill
is a climax. On top of that, the title gives
off an aura of mystery, beautifully represented by the fabulous cover that my
publisher came up with.
DO: Were there any big surprises as you researched your parents’ history? Anything you wished you hadn’t learned?
CC: I didn’t really “research” my folks’ history. Most of it came from my own memory,
challenged by observations from friends and other family members. Probably the biggest surprise was when my
wife, Laurel, accidentally came across my folks’ love letters, which neither my
brother nor I knew anything about.
It may sound
strange, but I got to know my parents and grandparents better as I wrote and
rewrote and performed. So I may have
learned more from writing than from research per se.
There’s really
nothing I wished I hadn’t learned, although I must admit those love letters
brought a touch of sadness, because they revealed my folks’ dreams that were never
fulfilled.
DO: What was the reaction of your family when you let them know you were
writing this book? What has been their
reaction with the finished product? Did
you receive any strong objections? Any
strong lobbying efforts?
CC: At first they seemed somewhat dubious that anyone would want to
publish a book about our family or that many people would be interested in
reading it. There were also privacy
concerns and, quite naturally, concerns about how the family might appear in
print. But nobody really objected. The only one who has talked to me about the
book since its publication is my brother, Gary, and he seemed happy with it. In fact, he broached the idea of writing a
sequel, telling the story from his
perspective.
DO: Your parents seemed bigger than life, two people with big hearts, big
egos, big tempers, and big dreams? These
temperaments seemed to make the intermarriage that much more difficult even
taking into account the time and place.
Agree?
CC: You’ve nailed it. Their natures
and personalities clashed in all kinds of ways.
The multiple dimensions of their intermarriage –- ethnicity, religion,
class, language -- served to heighten the conflict. And maybe those factors helped shape their
personalities. I don’t know exactly what
they were like before they met. But the structure of society back then,
particularly the culture of racial and religious bigotry and segregation, was poised
against them. Their personalities made a
tough situation more combustible.
DO: Your parents had a secret agreement to divide you and your younger
brother, Gary, between the two of them so that you were raised more Mexican and
Gary was raised more Jewish. This seems
like a recipe for disaster. Thoughts?
CC: Readers and audiences at the play have widely varying responses to
that decision. In fact, during the play,
there is often a gasp when I tell about it.
Admittedly it was a strange and maybe radical compromise, but I think it
may have been their best option for attempting to save their marriage and
trying to remove Gary and me from the family battlefield. Both Gary and I respect their
intentions.
DO: Do you have any words of advice for parents whose children are about
to marry someone from a different religion or culture?
CC: Respect difference. Talk
honestly about it. Try to understand
alternate perspectives. Don’t insist
that your own beliefs and concerns are the only ones worth considering.
Encourage your
children to talk honestly with their spouses-to-be about those differences,
including the way they’re planning to raise their children. And when their kids come along, grandparents
should support the importance of the grandchildren embracing the totality of their backgrounds. Don’t pressure them to reject part of their
heritage. Let them be whole.
This memoir sounds really interesting. I can't wait to read it.
ReplyDeleteDaniel, thank you for this interview! Dr. Cortes' memoir sounds so fascinating that I just bought it. Can't wait to read it. Sincerely, Nancy Reil Riojas, Author
ReplyDeleteDaniel, thank you for this interview with Dr. Cortes. His memoir sounds so fascinating that I just bought it. Can't wait to read it. Sincerely, Nancy Reil Riojas, Author
ReplyDelete