Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Guest Review: Chicana On Fire

Editor's Note: the poet Vibiana Aparicio-Chamberlin shares her collection this Sunday, October 30, 2022 at Pasadena, California's venerable independent bookseller, Vroman's Colorado Blvd. location at the forgiving hour of 1600, 4 p.m.


by Jimmy Centeno 
 
Vibiana Aparicio-Chamberlin’s poetry in Chicana on Fire (2022) is testimonial and collective. She was born and raised in Boyle Heights, California. She earned an M.A in Theater Arts from California State University, Los Angeles. She is an activist, writer and a visual and performing artist. Aparicio-Chamberlin has been published in several literary and art magazines. In her preface to  Chicana On Fire she describes her childhood memory “as a need to shout out her grievances, for this I was called a bad mouth, a grosera. By today’s standards I would have been considered a critical thinker.”

Aparicio-Chamberlin’s poetry draws us to the center of her inner glow. To open Aparicio-Chamberlin’s book is to encounter an aroma of wet earth. History and politics are braided into her poems and stories. At times her poetry and storytelling process is of volcanic dimensions, eruptive and explosive. On other occasions they are soft swells of maternal loving care dedicated to her family and loved ones.

Her feminist consciousness does not exclude understanding the liberation of women but depends also on the need to liberate men from their own dominant patriarchal chains. Aparicio-Chamberlin’s Chicana feminism draws a clear distinction between white (Liberal) feminists and that of her Chicana identity; family, community and her Mexican heritage are all connected by her Indigenous roots and its mythology. Her writing is the offspring of a cactus tree with arched arms full of prickly pear fruit in resistance against droughts of love and the intolerable heat of racism.

Aparicio-Chamberlin’s identity and cultural references weave through the book like a huipil. Each page in  Chicana On Fire  opens up with a grito of reflection or a call out for redemption.  Unlike academics who in their attempt to be politically correct describe earth as a biosphere, Aparicio-Chamberlin’s oppositional thinking joins the majority of the world’s Indigenous/aborigine people who refer to earth as Mother Earth; a giver of life. Her chapter titles “Roots,” “Cactus pad,” “Cactus Flower,” ”Prickly Pear,” “Thorns and Nopal,”  are in communion with her passion, feelings and emotions. She amplifies her strength in these chapters with teyolia: the spiritual force that resides in the human heart. An Intimate love experience in 'Flor y Canto' feels like a heart stricken by a cactus thorn; it hurts again when removing it:

With insatiable hunger you stroked my waist.
Now you turn your eyes away from me.

'Flor y Canto,' without a doubt speaks truth, “Every time you refuse tenderness, your heart dies—Loveless, unrequited.”

In 'Don’t Open the Door,' Aparicio-Chamberlin brings us close to the frightful drama of an undocumented family. The poem begins as a letter from the teacher to the mother of Alejandro, warning her to tell her son not to open the door, to be quiet and stay still if he hears a knock. The mother’s consecutive instructions of don’t do this and don’t do that to her child string like beads on a rosary, one right after the other.

The 1970 sheriff assault on the Chicano peace protest against the Vietnam War at Laguna Park in East Los Angeles led to Aparicio-Chamberlin’s poetry of protest. Her indignation fired up a series of poems addressing police brutality. In "Attacked, Tear Gassed, And Bludgeoned By Sherrifs At The National Chicano Moratorium Against The War In Vietnam East Los Angeles, August 29, 1970", Aparicio-Chamberlin reveals her outrage and determination never to forget the life-changing incident.  She writes, “I froze; lost my speech. I cried inside my head.” Her invisible tears are fossilized amber in this poem.

Aparicio-Chamberlin’s poems and stories capture what, at times, other forms of art cannot, the breadth of sound united with words that rhyme out the soul of her experiences. Her poems are poetic documentations of life.

Her poems are poetic documentations of life.

For Kenyan writer and scholar Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o “content is ultimately the arbiter of form.”  The content in Chicana On Fire, relampaguea like Pablo Neruda’s Canto General, a Latin American continental protest. Aparicio-Chamberlin’s content departs from her commitment to rescue and preserve memory that allows her community the space to evaluate its circumstances as actors themselves in writing their own history.

Palestine, Haiti, Vietnam, hence the Global South, is part of her political poetry. In ‘Oh, Palestine’ Aparicio-Chamberlin wishes to build a perfumed bridge to be close to her Palestine sisters in struggle. In her poem dedicated to Haiti, she describes her desire for a small plot of land for the poor, and “No more quaking only the Earth stretching and scratching to loosen the soil for beans and corn to grow for you.”

In Aparicio-Chamberlin’s short story ‘The Bishop’s Ring’, a vendor catches sight of the bishop in front of the Los Angeles Cathedral on Grand and Temple. She rushes across the street and extends the bishop a handmade clay rosary as a gift. The bishop ignores the gift and instead puts out his “manicured hand” with a ring to be kissed by the vendor. She hesitates and lightly touches the bishop’s ring with her lips. He moves away with no blessing and no kind gesture for this hard working woman. Aparicio-Chamberlin’s keen sensitivity captures contradictions in the making. Class consciousness is layered in-between many of her stories and poems.  She is vivid in her description of the vendor and stealthy with her observation between those who hold power accompanied with arrogance, and those from below, the working class.

Chicana On Fire rescues the 1970s internationalism solidarity with the Third World back to the reader. Space, place and geography are continuous references braided together in her work. In ‘We Didn’t Cross The Border, The Border Crossed Us’, Aparicio-Chamberlin traces the constant overgrowth of a border scar made by U.S imperial ambitions and the oppressive border (racist) measures promoted by ex-presidents, James Polk, Bush, Clinton, Trump and Obama towards Mexico and Latin America. In this same poem Aparicio-Chamberlin reminds the reader of the impact of steel walls with razor ribbons on wildlife, on both sides of the border.

What German philosopher Herbert Marcuse (1898- 1979) concept calls Great Refusal is the backbone in Chicano on Fire. Marcuse’s idea in the Great Refusal is one against the acceptance of life as it is without questioning it.  Aparicio-Chamberlin refuses alienating doctrines that justify the exploitation of human beings by other human beings all across the world.

These series of stories and poems are written with fire and courage. Aparicio-Chamberlin brings forth a ballad of cantos dedicated to love and to promote discussions. Chicana On Fire contains the ganas to build a different promising world for all.

Jimmy Centeno is an artist, a welder, an independent  curator and writer. 

His art practice is in the mediums of photography, painting and sculpture. 

He holds a degree in Latin American studies with an emphasis in art and Latin American philosophy from CSULA. 

He is a member of AfyL (Association of Philosophy and Liberation in Mexico) and founder of Latin American Art Research. 

His art practices dates to his high school experience in metal shop. 

He's taught welding at Compton Community College. 




/ Reprinted from


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