By Ernest Hogan
I’m
a cartoonist at heart, a dyslexic who started expressing himself
visually before writing, or even reading, became comfortable. My
approach is more that of a slapstick comedian than a poet. My
speculative fictions tend to be satirical.
My
Chicano experience makes racism a frequent target. I see it as fighting back. Racism should be dragged out into the blazing sun and
deconstructed before a live audience in a ritual similar to
both a vivisection and a bullfight.
I’ve
thrashed out at these pendejadas over the years. Like a naive
idealist, I thought that these protest works would become dated, and
I would have to explain that racism and the grotesquerie it spawns
actually existed.
But
when I look back at my published work I'm horrified to find that racism does
not get old, the pendejadas of the past are still with us, and my
decades old writings still ring true.
Now that El Presidente is empowering the bigots, and the Supreme
Court and Putin are backing him up . . .
I’m probably going to grit my teeth and write something else. I’m actually tired of writing about racism, but it keeps me out of jail.
Like I said, it’s fighting back.
As
Ishmael Reed quoted Muhammad Ali: “Writin’ is fightin’.”
Meanwhile,
I offer some links to some this fighting/writing. Maybe the uneasy
laughter will do some good.
Gringos
is
a chapter from High Aztech that
captures the essence of the novel and of the Latinoid condition on both
sides of the Border, a never-ending nightmare from which we can’t
escape because we don’t know if we’re awake or asleep. I wrote it
back in the Nineteen-Nineties and reads like it was ripped from
today’s headlines. The folks at Mithila Review: The Journal of International Science Fiction & Fantasy
were
kind enough to put it online.
Doctora Xilbalba’s Datura Enema
appeared
in, and was written for, Rudy Rucker’s Flurb, a Webzine of Astonishing Tales.
He suggested I write about then Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s reign
of terror. Opportunities like that don’t come often. See why El
Presidente gives me déjà vu? I wonder what happened to Jan? She’s
gone, but her pendejadas live on.
UNO!
DOS! ONE-TWO! TRES! CUATRO! was
written while El Presidente was running for the office. It was
inspired by his campaign rhetoric. Like the old business saying goes,
“Give the people what they want . . .” I tried to create a
far-out dystopian vision. Lately, I think I may have
been too conservative. The whole thing is in Five to the Future: All New Novelettes of Tomorrow.
You can read an excerpt in Somos en Escrito: The Latino Literary Online Magazine.
The
current situation hasn’t inspired a new story yet, but then this
long, hot summer is just heating up. The night air already burns. The
problem is, it’s getting hard to out-do pendejadas . . .
Ernest Hogan’s Smoking Mirror Blues
is
available in a new edition. He’s going to be the final judge of the First nnual Somos en Escrito Extra-Fiction Writing Contest 2018.
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