Review: Francisco A. Lomelí, Osiris Aníbal Gómez, Eds. Juan Felipe Herrera. Migrant, Activist, Poet Laureate. Tucson: UofA Press, 2023
Michael Sedano
Someone has to be first. Someone, or someones, have to be the first editors to compile the first critical collection of scholarship centered around Juan Felipe Herrera.
Editors Francisco Lomelí and Osiris Gómez became those someones with the June 2023 publication of the first critical survey of the extensive works scholars have produced about the first raza U.S. Poet Laureate, and before that honor, the first raza California Poet Laureate, Juan Felipe Herrera.
I say, "Raza," not "Chicano"owing to a point JFH makes in the closing interview, "How Do I Identify Myself."Part I offers "Critical Perspectives on JFH's Poetics." Only one writer outright accuses Herrera of Chicanismo, Marzia Milazzo's "'To Go into American as I Go into Myself'"Chicana/o Indigeneity, the Indigenous Other, and the Ethnographic Gaze in JFH's _Mayan Drifter_".
1973: Juan Felipe Herrera and Lyn Romero (qepd) |
Another Part I writer, María Herrera-Sobek shares a fascinating investigation of neologisms and caló, offering finely-detailed catalogs of Herrera's language and linguistic maneuverings.
2014: JFH leads "the Unity poem" on his last day as California Poet Laureate |
Part II, "On Camaraderie and Poetics: Other Authors Reflect on JFH's Impact on Chicano Literature," there's that "Chicano" word again. This section includes a delightful personal essay by Tom Lutz recounting a two-family trip across Iowa where Herrera breaks the monotony creating a conceptual quest for the title "Gravy Donuts, 24/7: A Personal Reading of JFH."
2010: the Reunion Floricanto at USC. Herrera opens his reading with the same piece he opened with in 1973 |
Part III, "The Child-Poet Within Me: Toward an Analysis of JFH's Children and Young Adult Literary Production focuses not only upon the books but the central role food plays in the Herrera oeuvre, with papers like Manuel Martín-Rodriguez' "JFH's Illustrated Books for Young Readers: Chicano Children's Literature con Cilantro."
2012: speaking as one of the Chancellors of the Academy of American Poets |
2010: the Reunion Floricanto at USC |
California Poet Laureate and volunteer readers. Sedano in red beret. |
UCLA Profe Dr. Concepción Valadez happy to have her book signed by the author. |
Well, Michael, you dazzled me again with your friend's readings. I will share this with my granddaughter. Who is attending UC Davis. You always bring that focus into my life. And then I share it with my surrounding pears. Because what you have to offer works. Comrade PERALEZ P.S. You know, I didn't learn to read until I was 20 at 12 I stuttered so severely no education for this Indigenous Chicano.
ReplyDeleteExcellent review. You give us a clear sense of this historic laureate, his humanity and impact. The wonderful photos themselves speak volumes. Thank you for this.
ReplyDelete