Robert
Paul Moreira is an English Ph.D. candidate at the University of Texas-San
Antonio researching alterity and constructed identities in sports fiction,
films, and performance. His fiction, interviews, criticism, and scholarship has
been published or is forthcoming in Southwest American Literature, Bluestem,
Concho River Review, Aethlon: Journal of Sports Literature, Soccer
and Society, and the anthologies SOL: Vol. I (SOL, 2012) and NewBorder:
Contemporary Voices From the Texas/Mexico Border (Texas A&M Press,
2013). Moreira is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize nomination (2012), two
graduate fiction awards from the Texas Association of Creative Writing Teachers
(2009, 2010), and the Wendy Barker Creative Writing Award (2011). He teaches
writing and literature at the University of Texas-Pan American.
In his latest project, Moreira serves as editor of the just released ¡Arriba Baseball!: A Collection of Latino/a Baseball Fiction (VAO Publishing, 2013). With a foreword by Peter C. Bjarkman, the anthology features stories by Dagoberto Gilb, Norma Elia Cantú, Wayne Rapp, Daniel Romo, Edward Vidaurre, René Saldaña, Jr., Juan Antonio González, Kathryn Lane, Nelson Denis, David Rice, Melissa Hidalgo, Pete Cava, Thomas de la Cruz, Christine Granados and Robert Paul Moreira.
You
don't have to be a baseball fan to be enthralled by this exciting and often
poignant collection of fiction. Moreira kindly agreed to answer a few questions
for La Bloga readers about ¡Arriba
Baseball!
ROBERT PAUL
MOREIRA:
A confluence of things, I'd say. My passion for the game and for writing, first
and foremost. Growing up in eighties in Los Angeles, I associated baseball with
Fernando "El Toro" Valenzuela from the get go, so that the Latino
presence was synonymous with Major League Baseball from the start for me. Then,
in 2010, I received my MFA in Creative Writing from UT-Pan American where my
thesis consisted of a collection of baseball-themed short stories. The seed
began to sprout there, I remember. But it wasn't until my doctoral studies
tuned me into texts by Gloria Anzaldúa, José Esteban Muñoz, Adrian Burgos, and
others that I began to envision what the collection could do to disrupt the
Anglo- and male-centered genre of baseball fiction as a whole. My goal with ¡Arriba!
is to complicate any and all notions of gendered and white privilege in
baseball fiction, as well as to counter the idea that Latino/a authors have
nothing to contribute to this popular sports genre.
DO: Were you surprised by the submissions that came in?
RPM: Pleasantly
surprised. Submissions came in from all across the United States, but I also
requested stories from authors. The stories by Rene Saldaña and Norma Cantú
were written specifically for the collection. Dagoberto Gilb’s “Uncle Rock” had
originally been published in the The New Yorker, of course, and when he
agreed to let me include the story in the collection, I was very excited. With ¡Arriba!,
I tried my best to include a good mix of established and emerging authors. Each
of the stories does a fantastic job of moving past traditional baseball
nostalgia and zeroing in on the Latino/a experience both on and off the
baseball diamond.
DO: Did you encounter any pitfalls on the way to publication?
1 comment:
Very interesting interview!
Baseball is important throughout Latin America and for Latinos in the US. Now we can thank Robert P. Moreira for bringing together intriguing and fabulous stories on Baseball for all of us to enjoy.
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