Showing posts with label Poetry Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry Reading. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Autry Summer Kickoff. liz gonzález On-line Floricanto. Rose Poets Unusual Places

liz gonzález On-line Floricanto: Autry After Hours
Michael Sedano

Autry After Hours from the gente at the Autry National Center in Los Angeles’ Griffith Park adds razacentric programming to the region’s busy menu of summer fare. The museum has leveraged its ongoing PST:LA/LA exhibit featuring La Raza Newspaper to fashion a series of three low-cost events featuring raza poetry and other arte.

The launch event is a well-attended mid-week social gathering fearuing a floricanto with poets liz gonzález and Luis J. Rodriguez. Music and interactive art-making come with the $5.00 admission. Parking at the Autry is free. The May 16 event is Las Mujeres, and the June wrap-up is Viva el Arte. More information here.

Staff opened the gates at 630 for a 7 p.m. opening reading by  gonzález. That’s an early enough hour that energy-depleted tipos like me are able to catch the opening hour. Throngs arrived in large numbers, clearly CPT isn’t what it once was. Equally clearly, the Autry's P.R. team is on the ball.

The Autry devoted significant resources to La Raza. There's an ISSUU Captions Catalog (link) showing the ample layout of gallery space compartmented into rooms named after six themes. In The Body room, performance artist Artemisa Clark holds several reams of typing paper in her arms, reading from the coroner’s inquest into the police and sheriff killings of Lin Ward, Angel Diaz, and Ruben Salazar.


Performance Art is a hard row to hoe. I looked for documentation on the performance and went wanting. Clark, if this is she in the foto, reads in the room while people come and go speaking of the fotos, noting the few spoken words they catch, turning to a foto and sharing, “my grandma was there.” The performance is all the love song this artist gets. That, and the reduced muscle strain the more pages she sheds.

Next After Hours will need better signage. A hand-printed sign tacked to a wall lists the readers. Near the appointed hour, with little fanfare, liz gonzáles takes the spotlight.


Quickly people seize one of the twenty stools. Standing listeners gather, positioning themselves to see and hear, clustering to allow passersby and at least one photographer to wind around to find an open space.

Bringing the exhibit’s “previously inaccessible” fotos to public, the museum claims these fotos speak to “the joint roles of photography and activism in the ongoing struggle for human rights across the globe.” Except at the Autry, where “No Photos” rendered the exhibit property protected from independent photographers. Tonight, the “no photos” rule is abandoned.



For background on the “inaccessible” history, see these two La Bloga columns.


liz gonzález Illuminates Autry After Dark

La Bloga is happy to share poems liz gonzález read for her Autry audience. The poems come from gonzález' forthcoming July publication, Dancing in the Santa Ana Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected (Los Nietos Press July 2018) (link)




The Summer Before 9th Grade
By liz gonzález

Before I lassoed my first tongue-kiss
and my longhaired boyfriend ignored me
in science class the next day,
before I ran for Valentine’s Queen
against my ex-best-friend
and we broke out flailing Chihuahua claws,
yanking hair, yelping cuss words
in front of the principal’s office,
I woke to the trill of tin bells,
strapped on two-inch suede platforms,
clonked four and a half long blocks
through heat waves rising from the sidewalks,
held down my neon orange and lime
miniskirt and climbed the bus
headed for San Bernardino Main Library.

The click and slide of card catalogs
played funkier grooves
than Tower of Power ’s “ Bump City.”
Crackling book spines
engraved with golden curlicues
excited me more than a boy girl pool party.
I couldn't wait to plunge the crinkled pages inside.
All morning, I squeezed hard backs
between Dewey Decimal neighbors,
helped text hunters explore shelves.
Whenever the mean librarian couldn't see me
behind the oversized section,
I snuck a read.

On scorching afternoon rides home,
books pointing out of my backpack
like a fisherman's net after a good day's catch,
I made a pit stop at Esperanza Market
on Mount Vernon Avenue where the butcher
wrapped-up a pickled pigs' foot for me.
With my legs sweat-stuck to the plastic bench seat,
I gnawed that pata to the bone,
cooled off with Robert Frost’s poems.
The bus slanted up Fifth Street to Foothill
while I dove deep into songs of tinkling brooks
and leafless woods until my stop
at the bench on Meridian Avenue.



Poetic Response to La Raza exhibit, Autry Museum, 2018 (In-progress)
By liz gonzález

I. Another Report on TV about Chicanos Protesting

Chicanos, Mama and Grandma spit,
like it’s a dirty word. They’re an embarrassment
to our people. I stop playing with my Barbies
and scoot closer to the screen. Teenage girls,
brown like me, are marching on a main street.
They look like soldiers in their khaki uniform jackets—
utility belts cinched at the waist, pockets above
and below. Brown berets tipped to the right.
They stand straight, straight faced—tough.
Their cat eye make-up, styled dark hair,
three-inch chunk heeled boots add to their power.
An army of Brown girls.

I want to be like them
when I grow up—strong and cool.
I don’t understand what
they’re fighting against or for,
but I know they’re right.



II. Protest Signs and Headlines
Then and Today Selected




III. What We Do When We’re Not Working for Social Justice and Equity

We tear up the rented dance floor at our cousin’s backyard party while Brown

We help paint the community mural on the wall at the corner market while Brown

We groove at Saturday jams at the band shell in the park while Brown

We race bikes up a steep street after school while Brown

We live La Vida Jota at the Chicana / Chicano Conference while Brown

We scarf down tamales, con carne or vegan—nopal is vegan—at our girlfriend’s kitchen table while Brown

We visit the La Raza exhibit at the Autry with our old friend from MEChA while Brown

We make love while Brown

We drop by the Chicana owned bookstore on the way home from work while Brown

We attend the college graduation of a DACA client that our immigration law practice helped out while Brown

We slow dance with our honey at our 50th wedding anniversary party at the VFW hall while Brown

We check out the Chicano Poet Laureate’s reading at an arts event while Brown

We hang out at the Latinx craft brewery with our Black, Indigenous, Asian, and White friends while Brown

We breathe while Brown

We love while Brown
Live while Brown
Love while Brown
Live while Brown
Viva La Raza!



liz gonzález, a fourth generation Southern Californian, grew up in the San Bernardino Valley. She is the author of Dancing in the Santa Ana Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected, forthcoming from Los Nietos Press (July 2018). Her poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction have been published widely. Her work will appear in or recently appeared in Fire and Rain: Ecopoetry of California, Inlandia: San Bernardino, City of Los Angeles 2017 Latino Heritage Month Calendar and Cultural Guide, Voices from Leimert Park Anthology Redux, The Coiled Serpent: Poets Arising from the Cultural Quakes and Shifts of Los Angeles, and Wide Awake: The Poets of Los Angeles and Beyond.

Her recent awards include a 2017 Residency at Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts, a 2017 Arts Council for Long Beach Professional Development Microgrant, and a 2016 Incite / Insight Award from the Arts Council for Long Beach.

She directs Uptown Word & Arts, promoting literacy and arts, is a member of Macondo Writers Workshop, serves on the Macondo 2018 ad hoc advisory board, and is a creative writing instructor at the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program. lizgonzalez.com




Pasadena Rose Poets: Poetry In Unusual Places

 Toni Mosley, Gerda Govine Ituarte
Pasadena Rose Poets bring poetry to unusual places. Sometimes those places turn out to be unusually hard to find parking. That was the situation one recent Wednesday noon when Pasadena’s City Council opened its Chambers to Gerda Govine Ituarte and the Pasadena Rose Poets (link). The group observed National Poetry Month in the picturesque site.

The luxurious space has become familiar ground to the Rose Poets, who read a poem to open every council meeting. One elected remarked on the body’s calmed civic engagements since the poetry started.

Despite the delayed start, sporadic interruptions greeted a poet, apologetic parkers stressed at their arrival because poetry is important and they missed out. The long walk on a hot day, and having to negotiate a film crew blocking most entries added to the relief of sinking into an upholstered cushion in the cool.

Parking ticket revenue is like poetry to the city. Important, to the point the meters have strict enforcement by roaming bicycle time minders. My meter was soon up so I had to abandon my chair between readers. I hope the poets weren’t too dismayed by the shrinking audience.

Govine reports a video in progress of all four “unusual” readings. La Bloga will share its location when the video becomes available. Visit the Rose Poets Facebook page for current information.

Special Guest Toni Mosley

Carla Sameth

Gerda Govine Ituarte


Tuesday, January 31, 2017

La Palabra one seventeen. Zoot Suit Is Back. Teatro News.

This Circle Will Be Unbroken
Michael Sedano

180º of La Palabra's open circle seating plan. Harry, a regular open mic'er has the floor.

Karineh Mahdessian opens the reading to the enthusiastic applause of delighted poets and poetry lovers. The Sunday, January 29 meeting marks the third anniversary of Mahdessian's assuming the role of emcee and coordinator of the long-lived reading series at northeast Los Angeles' stimulating Avenue 50 Studio.


Ordinarily, Mahdessian elects to allow her guests to occupy the spotlight. These aren't ordinary times. Marking this, Karineh started the poetry with a piece from Suheir Hammad's collection, Born Palestinian, Born Black: & The Gaza Suite. Mahdessian's quiet reading of the powerful poem defines the ambience of the times, gives a solid perspective on the work that will follow.

The Open Mic

Today's agenda begins with volunteers to share a single piece. Diane Tirado, Jessica, Don Kingfisher Campbell, and Charles L. Davis (first foto, clockwise from upper left) share time with today's audience.

Open Mic clockwise from top left:
 Diane Tirado, Jessica, Don Kingfisher Campbell,  Charles L. Davis

I read a 500-word memoir about a ride up to a missile site during a raging snow storm. It was a spur of the moment decision that seemed appropriate, since one of today's spotlight readers is a Korean poet and the snow storm was part of my thirteen-month experience in that country. I should have brought my reading glasses. I mangled the text. Mee an hum, chum ("that's tough luck, pal" in pidgin.)

Also sharing the open mic spotlight are Albie Preciado, Aaron, Alex Hohmann, and Diedre. Preciado knows how to win hearts--he is the unofficial official baker of La Palabra. Today's wheat-based treats are a key lime shortbread and a tahini-based muffin. I whisper to him that shortbread is among the very few successful gluten-free cookies in existence.

Open Mic clockwise from top left:
Albie Preciado, Aaron, Alex Hohmann, Diedre 

Featured Poets

Four poets each get 15 minutes to share their work. Tanya Ko Hong is up first, Derek Brown follows, then Lisbeth Coiman and Caits Meissner. Mahdessian keeps the features on their toes while preventing the buildup of stress by calling them up in random order.

Tanya Ko Hong
Tanya Ko Hong blends immigrant humor with poetic elegance. In one narrative piece she relates the struggles of a Hangul speaker with English phonetics. The problems are not limited to words like "river," but more so to ill-trained teachers who correct, "river!" "liver." "River!" "That's what I said!" And the teacher points to her lips and says, watch my mouth, "river."

That style of instruction is torturous, more so than the absence of "r" in some tongues. Tanya articulates the sound with ease.

Tanya Ko Hong
Tanya Ko Hong

Derek Brown strings together his pieces with an interior monologue. "Self," I said to myself, "don't begin a reading with a strident political piece. Well..." Well is his hook transition into a stridently political piece. "Oh, no, self, you can't...." then he does. Brown uses the technique with aplomb, the narration seamlessly linked with the verse. A dynamic physical presence adds to his engaging ethos. 

Derek Brown

Derek Brown
Derek Brown

Lisbeth Coiman immigrated from Venezuela to Canada on her journey to the United States. Her politics and poetry make ideal couplings for effective poetry and memoirist prose. She shares a "spoken word" recitation from memory that energizes the house not just through rhythm and image but also because she seizes the floor performing on her feet. After this she takes a seat to read another poem then an extended memoir of citizenship, blackness, latinidad, and U.S. xenophobia.

Lisbeth Coiman


Lisbeth Coiman
Lisbeth Coiman

Caits Meissner closes the featured readers segment, sharing work from her newly released collection, Let It Die Hungry. As usual, I don't have any money so I'm unable to buy a copy. Drat, the work teems with the smell and feel of New York City. One piece recounts a confrontation on a subway. Looks deceive. Some cholas--though that's not the NYC term--and a middle-aged presumably anglo woman look to the narrator to be facing off. Sensing incipient violence from the youngsters, the narrator watches with unease. But this older woman has insight and her own history. The women end the meeting with a fist-bump.

Caits Meissner

Caits Meissner
Caits Meissner
La Palabra Hosted by Karineh Mahdessian meets at Avenue 50 Studio the last Sunday of every month. Check La Palabra's Facebook page for updates.

Caits Meissner, Tanya Ko Hong, Karineh Mahdesian, Derek Brown, Lisbeth Coiman

Serendipity is no accident. Writers from Las Lunas Locas, a writing group attended in force to support Karineh and La Palabra. I was pleased to gather las lunas for a group portrait with three  of today's featured poets.

Las Lunas Locas En Propria Persona

Tonight's The Night! Zoot Suit Returns to L.A.'s Mark Taper Forum

Curtain goes up at 8:00 p.m. on the revival of Luis Valdez' Zoot Suit. The musical, featuring music by Lalo Guerrero, debuted at the Taper as a festival piece in Gordon Davidson's innovative  New Theater for Now series. The production, featuring Daniel Valdez as el Pachuco was an instant hit. Zoot Suit returned as a main stage production featuring Edward James Olmos in the career-making pachuco role, with Valdez as Hank Reyna. That production was a gem of characterization, emotion, drama, dancing, everything good that can happen on stage happened. I'm sure that magic will return beginning with tonight's opening.

The Mark Taper Forum, celebrating its 50th Anniversary Season, brings this most celebrated of productions back to LA. It's a hot ticket. Slime, AKA brokers, are asking around $400.00 for a $75 seat. You can still find a seat via the Center Theater Group's sales page. Unlikely you'll get to sit with your gang, but the Amelia Taper Auditorium is a small house and everyone is close to the stage and within hailing distance of those across the hall.

LATC: The Raza Theater in El Lay

The Center Theater Group and the Mark Taper Forum are the elite venue for live teatro in the city, but the raza-operated Los Angeles Theater Center is far from rasquachi and merits support. The highly polished professional work at LATC offers Los Angeles' best bargain in live teatro, although Boyle Heights' Casa 0101 gives LATC and CTG a run for their money.

This season, LATC offers a special deal of three world premieres for $75.00. That's the price of a cheap seat to Zoot Suit.

Click here for LATC ticketing.




Rio Grande February: NHCC Events

For details on National Hispanic Cultural Center programming, visit the NHCC's website here (link).




Tuesday, May 05, 2015

4 Floricantos: Union Station. Chaparral. ClassicSlam. On-line. Updates & News.

Rush Hour Four: Poets in Union Station East
Michael Sedano



Los Angeles afternoon rush hour begins peaking around 4:00 when a quarter-mile jaunt turns into a forty-five minute ordeal on heated highways, or fifteen hectic minutes on rude surface streets. Public transit riders skip the hassles and pour into Union Station to hop a train or bus and enjoy a hands-free outbound commute. Today they get a second Rush Hour, a poetry reading for listeners on-the-go and a real tough audience.

Celebrating National Poetry Month, the Poetry Society of America with Poetry in Motion/LA, and most importantly hosted by Metro Art's staffers Amalia Merino and Heidi Zeller, sited the event for highest possible visibility in Union Station's sleek east terminal.

Subway passengers ascend the escalator into the hall. Waves of moving crowds pour in from arriving buses. Thanks to the rotunda's echo effect, people hear before they see the poet standing at the microphone in the middle of the concourse.

Most people hitch a step, glance over and nod approval or surprise with the spectacle. A few commuters irritatedly wheel briefcases through poetry-captivated slowpokes and those who join deliberately to stand and enjoy the unique setting and the Rush Hour four. A poet gets a few seconds of prime time attention in which to say enough that onrushing pedestrians catch something before passing out of range.

Robin Coste Lewis reads into a public address system that ensures hearing the poets for a
few fleeting phrases by commuters thronging into the tunnel toward trains.

Four poets stand at a lectern under magnificent rotunda and mural overhead, microphone connected to quality loudspeakers on stanchions. The artists' voices project into public space, reaching out to find a note of recognition wherever it will; from the couple with a baby in a stroller, the purposeless ambler, workshirts with names embroidered on them, to the hurried severe black suits who have no time to stop and stare.

Every few minutes, buses unload road-weary riders. Trains unleash waves of people who pour out from below on their way to somewhere else. And there's a poetry reading going on for this ever-changing audience. Maybe they get thirty seconds.

The line-up includes two Los Angeles Poets Laureate, 2012 Laureate Eloise Klein Healy, and the current Laureate, Luis J. Rodriguez, along with Robin Coste Lewis and Kate Gale.

2015 Los Angeles Poet Laureate Luis J. Rodriguez greets
2012 LA Poet Laureate Eloise Klein Healy.

Heidi Zeller takes Amalia Merino's foto with Luis Rodriguez. Metro Art produces various 
free arts and cultural programs at Union Station, including music, dance, poetry and film.

The poets patch together a floricanto for fly-bys. Those able to take in the entire hour were treated to Healy's quiet thoughts, Lewis' nostalgic memoirs, then Gale's wit and delicate ironies were a welcome lead-in to Luis J. Rodriguez.

Eloise Klein Healy

Robin Coste Lewis

Kate Gale

Rodriguez reads at an apogee of his oral art, a stunning performance blending memoir, history, cultura in a style he fits to time and place. Rodriguez chooses loud, expansive poems about living, and life in L.A.  He reads for the gente in front of him, but more so Rodriguez projects deep into the tunnel, his poems following people as they walk away, listening through the din of the echoing passage to his urgent expressions. 


Luis J. Rodriguez

Luis J. Rodriguez at lectern during Rush Hour in Union Station



Special On-line Floricanto para La Madre Tierra: Excerpt from Spirits of the Chaparral by Amanda Yeats Garcia


My pursuit of a perfect photograph of public speakers rewards me with often being in places where poetry is spoken, getting to hear poems performed by the poets. There's added stimulus of listening for a gesture, seeking a moment's eye contact, anticipating a dynamic posture to photograph, knowing to see it is to miss it.

Like others in the audience, I get to listen to the words and structure of spoken art, get into the poet's flow and allow the art to take over, immersing into the puro uniqueness that inheres in time and place.  The lens is restrictive, technology requiring its mechanical and reflexive control. A speaker's portrait comes at a phrase with open mouth or tender whispering lips, eyes open, a person feeling words come out as dynamic gesture. Anticipation means releasing the shutter just before the moment.

Guess right and the image expresses distinctive blendings of poet poem time and place. Most are a miss. Technology reprieves the bad guess through the nearly infinite resources of digital. Whereas film limited one to 5 or 6 exposures to get one, today's media allow fifty or a hundred frames to find a keeper.

It was while waiting one of those moments and listening to Amanda Yates Garcia read about California's chaparral, I was struck by her love and deep understanding of the rough scrub, "sagebrush," covering Southern California's disappearing raw tierra, dry washes, arroyos, foothills and canyons. A single hearing wasn't enough. Here was a poem to match our mountains.

Recognizing sublime moments of spoken art like Garcia's reading occur irreproducibly and only at the one time and place, I know there's no pausing and rewinding. It is what it is, whatever I missed, I've missed forever.

There's no going back to Poesia Para La Gente's garden floricanto in Highland Park's Milagro Allegro Community Garden. La Bloga offers the next best thing, a one-woman On-line Floricanto for la madre tierra on the eve of Mother's Day. Amanda Yates Garcia shares an excerpt from her work-in-progress.

Introduction
Spirits of the Chaparral is part of a book of essays, prose and poems dedicated to the magical essence of the city of Los Angeles. I've been been working on this book for several years and expect to finish it in 2015.

The book includes pieces like Incantations for Navigating the Cardinal Directions for Los Angeles, Spell To Be A Writer, Spell To Mend A Broken Heart, and a Table of Correspondences for the elemental spirits of the city.

Excerpt from "Spirits of the Chaparral"
By Amanda Yates Garcia 


“I call in the spirit of Mojave sage!” An intense aromatic field permeates the air, a wash of cleansing turpentine. Sage secretes terpenes in its blood, chemical warfare against hungry deer and other pests. But rather than kill its enemies, sage turns the chaparral into a temple. Sage is the beloved pope of the Southwest, surrounded by an army of celebrants: hummingbirds, bumble bees, native wasps all will fight fiercely in its defense. But they are no match for us descendants of warrior tribes: Trojans, Conquistadors, Marines. We snatch the sacred herbs from their plinths and use them to fragrance our yoga studios.



We’ve built our banks and tech firms upon the ruins of temples and shrines, the once vast and mighty civilizations of plant life. But know this: the plants still exist here as ghosts. As presences. For 15 millennia, humans and plants in Southern California lived in the same reality. Until a new crop of humans arrived by boat, from beyond the realm of death. The plants knew us as visitors from the future. Yarrow foretold that they were the harbingers of death. These new humans, she claimed, had traded belonging for power, for the opportunity to create and destroy. We had become great and horrible angels. Spirit beings from the other side. And as with so many angels, we were jealous. Always needing to be the ones who’re loved best.



But behold! Like Yarrow, we too can see the future. Peer forward to what lies beyond our own graves, where we will see the angels of our own creation. See the machines we now feed with the fruits of our own frenzied labor. Machines who will one day use our bones as fertilizer. Who will mulch us. Who will prune us like topiary bushes into fantastical creatures. Who will, as our own prophets warn us, turn us into slaves, into batteries, just as we make the corn submit its ethanol. And then we will become the garden from which our own machines are exiled. And just like us, they will always long to return.



Amanda Yates Garcia is a multi-media artist, writer and Oracle of Los Angeles.
She has been published in a variety of publications in the United States and abroad such as the literary journal Black Clock, Entropy, and Cinema Publication (Synema Publikationen, Austria).

Her artwork has been featured at venues such as Brewery Projects, REDCAT, Highways Performance Space, Public Fiction, Side Street Projects, the Ben Maltz gallery, the Laband gallery, Human Resources.














Floricanto on Spring Street
Michael Sedano

Here I am, a sixty-nine year old smiling public man taking the hand of a young man named Paul. We grab palms, turn it around with a wrist twist, then he slides to a knuckle clasp and some moves my hand doesn’t know. He offers a fist that I bump with mine, and off goes Get Lit’s Manager of Education to notch up the excitement outside the lobby doors. When, a few seconds later, another Get Lit staffer proffers a horizontal fist I react with a simple fistbump, but not so fast we both know how far out of it I am. Far out. I realize I don’t know how to shake hands with these kids.

What we share in common is wanting to be part of today’s floricanto, a poetry slam contest showcasing Los Angeles high school students as spoken word artists. Classic Slam comes as an important element of Get Lit’s mission to increase teen literacy through classic and spoken word poetry. “Words Ignite,” goes Get Lit’s motto. I’m fired up.

Fired-up audience erupts at the end of a presentation. 


That’s why I am sitting in the Los Angeles Theater Center at eight on a Friday morning watching a well-oiled organization going through its paces. Get Lit staff work purposefully throughout the lobby carrying furniture, sorting materials, installing signage. People with questions make beelines to a  woman already surrounded by other questioners. Lindsay Halladay, one of the producers of today’s event, keeps everything on even keel, quickly issuing directions and heads my way.

Halladay outlines the registration task for me and two college-bound women before returning to myriad responsibilities for this 2015 edition of Get Lit’s annual Classic Slam.

Teams of up to 90 students arrive to congregate outside the Spring Street doors in rising energy. Paul is out there holding a pep rally for poetry. Crowd control works as designed to collect groups and move them into auditorium seats. Guides step into the throngs holding up signs naming a handful of schools. Teams follow their sign, parading through the front doors in semi-ordered lines and disappear into their assigned auditorium. Impressively serious these kids, none of the horseplay common in some gatherings.

Preparations whirl around Lindsay Halladay 
I can’t tell the contestants from the cheering section, all dress in everyday casual clothes. Tiny 9th graders file past followed by nearly-grown women and men in kids' clothing. They have permission slips, for photography and riding the bus. A wristband is lunch.

It's a school day. Schools and coaches have moved mountains getting these students to an experience of a lifetime. There are children representing schools like Morningside, Alhambra, San Gabriel, LACES, Social Justice. They get a front-row seat to a magical experience that starts with reading a book.

LATC's larger theaters--two 300- and one 500-seat amphitheater--fill with six or seven teams. Large contingents indicate a measure of student body support and administrative effectiveness. They also are the experienced teams with better chances of training a winner in tomorrow evening’s Finals. The bigger the room, the likelier a finalist will come from there. Or so I hear, from background conversations. I look at the master list and stride out for my choice.

Theater 4, a 99-seat flat rehearsal space, matches teams including rookie competitor Social Justice Leadership Academy. Today is the school’s first Classic Slam, so I choose theirs as my first, too. Someone from this room will advance to the semi-finals later today. Then, it’s equal opportunity to earn a spot in the finals. It’ll be kid, content, delivery, style, memorization, and time, scored on a scale of one to ten, toss the high and low.

Halladay churns the crowd holding a hand mic regularly refocusing the house on the rules and etiquette. The powerful sound system blasts clear, clean sound. A DJ fills in audio space left by the high energy emcee. Halladay echoes what Luis J. Rodriguez tells his audience in Union Station the other day. Applause is the only coin poets get from a reading so go ahead and appreciate.

Snap your fingers, Halladay demonstrates, show some love. During the readings, supporters will urge on poets with the sound of hundreds of spontaneously snapping fingers. This is the kind of magic that enthralls kids with literature, oracy, poetry.

Contestants couple a classic poem to a response poem written by the performer. The audience expects important classic themes, listening with interest while demanding unique entertainment.


One contestant couples Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet 43, “How do I love thee?,” with his own rolling monologue on love, loving, lovers. Ethos and cleverness earn him lots of fingersnaps and engaged interaction. He works the house like a seasoned performer; in physical control, using the full stage, holding listeners in comfortable rapport.






A following performer offers stolid contrast, gradually working from unimposing conversational mien into a powerfully self-assured feminist declaration that has women cheering loudly in solidarity and all stomping their feet. Her comrades surround her in hugs of joy when she steps off stage.


The final performer I see takes the stage with a determined spark in her eye and attitude. The Classic poem, about bilingualism, defines the logic of this reading but artistically pales contrasted to the poet’s own voice.

 I hope the contestant's essential simplicity is enough to move this message into the semi-final stage. Her apostrophe to a domineering father set against an agon of cultural fusion booms with quiet power. This demonstration of identity—the dancer becomes the dance--deeply moves judges and listeners.



For these kids, the nation's future leaders, keys to opportunity come from literacy and oracy, the confidence and poise that Classic Slam gives everyone. Seeing it, being there, generates strong commitment to having more in the future. Participants win by doing it. Next year, people in today's audience will find their way to the front, find herself in the spotlights of one of those big stages, looking into the darkness in the presence of 500 people snapping their fingers at something she just said.

Being able to read critically and choose a piece for an audience of peers offers personal satisfaction every kid deserves. Being able to express oneself in exuberant style and delivery, igniting emotion in good listeners by what you say and how you say it, that's the best reward of all! Poetry is power.

I hearken back to Aristotle’s belief that everyone should be able to defend themselves with swords. Equally unthinkable, he taught, was being unable to defend youself with your mouth. Get Lit Classic Slam is a poet’s sword, gente. I hope more schools seek it out.

 Learn more about Get Lit at the organization's website.



On-line Floricanto for 5/2015
Sono Arima, Israel Francisco Haros Lopez, Frank de Jesus Acosta, Jose Carillo, Xico Gonzales, Betty Sanchez, Mario Escobar


"American Pie" by Sono Arima
"Echo" by Israel Francisco Haros Lopez
"Dream of Veneration" by Frank de Jesus Acosta
"Matter/Material " by Jose Carillo
"La Marcha" por Xico Gonzales
"Remedios Caseros" por Betty Sanchez
"Black Spring" By Mario Escobar


AMERICAN PIE
by Sono Arima

the pie is in the sky
flying really high
looping and soaring
ripping and roaring

a rich flavored conglomerate
that's chock full of nuts

so come to the table
its a free for all
be you short or be you tall
round or thin
straight or bent
rich or poor...
did I say poor?

it's first come that is first served
so hurry it up
just pick the right door
the one up front
with gold filagree
might not be one meant for thee

around the corner and down the street
through the back alley there's one to be
pass the mops and kitchen sinks
just sit at the table and grab a chair

plates are warm and the pie's right there
help yourself but do not take too much
because all that's left are the crumbs to munch
Sono Arima (c) 2015 All Rights Reserved


 Sono  Arima is a poetess, novelist, and a painter. The majority of her awakened time is spent in the pursuit of exploring and perfecting her creative energies. Most of her poems comes to her in the wee hours of the mornings between the ethereal edges between sleep and the awakened state. She is concern with the human footprint upon the earth and humaneness. A transplant from Los Angeles, California and Homer, Alaska, Sono now resides in Passaic, New Jersey along with her two kittens whom she adores. You can visit her at www.sonoarima@wordpress.com




ECHO
by Israel Francisco Haros Lopez

Border politic amnesia
shedding its skin underneath social media lies
The serpent and the eagle are drowning in pools ofoil black and red blood digitized
and deleted but the facebookgeneration re-members for a second
to share. like. post. tag. re-share.
they might actually be re-called.




Israel Haros is currently working on 1000 border sketch poems as part of an artist residency. He has been accepted into the Immigration/Migration themed residency at Santa Fe Art Institute. He is a published author and has 6 published Adult Chicano Coloring Books. He is also currently working on 1000 sketches in a month as part of an inner artistic movement. He can be found using facebook as his office and also on his wordpress "waterhummingbirdhouse" Chicano from Boyle Heights with an B.A. in English From UC Berkeley and an MFA from California College of The Arts.




DREAM OF VENERATION 
by Frank de Jesus Acosta

In this dream of veneration
I am moved by warm sounds
Winged beings of many colors

Span a cobalt canvas of time

A feathered tapestry of yesterdays
Etching glimpses of tomorrows

Eagle, quetzal, condor cry melodic

Gliding in a circle dance of prayer

Flesh returns to earthen brown
Crimson blood, emerald waters
Pacha mama’s womb of creation

Cradling sibling continents of tribes

In this dream of veneration
A harmonic song of many voices
Prophesy a painful journey of hope

Nations rising in sovereignty of love



Frank de Jesus Acosta is principal of Acosta & Associates, a California-based consulting group that specializes in professional support services to public and private social change ventures in the areas of children, youth and family services, violence prevention, community development, and cultural fluency. In 2007, he authored, The History of Barrios Unidos, Cultura Es Cura, Healing Community Violence, published by Arte Publico Press, University of Houston. Acosta is a graduate of University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). His professional experience includes serving in executive leadership positions with The California Wellness Foundation, the Coalition for Humane Immigration Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), Downtown Immigrant Advocates (DIA), the Center for Community Change, and the UCLA Community Programs Office. He is presently focused on completing the writing and publishing a two book series for Arte Publico Press focused on best practices to improve the well-being of Latino young men and boys. Acosta most recently co-authored a published “Brown Paper” with Jerry Tello of the National Latino Fatherhood and Family Institute (NLFFI) entitled, “Lifting Latinos Up by Their Rootstraps: Moving Beyond Trauma Through a Healing-Informed Framework for Latino Boys and Men.” Acosta provides writing and strategic professional support in research, planning, and development to foundations and community-focused institutions on select initiatives focused on advancing social justice, equity, and pluralism. He is also finalizing writing and editing a book of inter-cultural poetry and spiritual reflections.





MATTER/MATERIAL 
by Jose Carrillo

matter doesn't matter
it comes
it grows
gets finished
it dies.
the human spirit matters:
the human spirit is constant
it goes on
sometimes with a murmur
sometimes with a cry
but it never dies;
Love is the energy
force of the eternal spirit
it is transmitted through
acts of
kindness
and
art.

Material 
por Jose Carrillo

lo material no importa
viene
crece
se acaba
se muere
el espíritu humano importa
el espíritu humano es constante
corre siempre
a veces con un murmuro
y a otras veces con un grito
pero nunca muere.
Amor es la energía
la fuerza del espíritu eterno
que se transmite por
gestos de
bondad
y
arte.
jose carrillo
03/15/15

José was born in Durango Mexico in 1932; grew up in California, earned a BA in Theater at San Francisco State College. He has enjoyed a lifetime of working in community theatre, playing jazz music on saxophone, flute and clarinet, writing poetry. He is a member of Seattle Norteños Writers as an events producer and performance poet. Photo is by Gene Frogge, Seattle, a candid taken during a Peace Show reading, Richard Hugo House, 2005.





LA MARCHA
por Xico González C/S

Caminamos siguiendo al águila
That Huitzilopochtli
sent us as a sign - a black Aztec eagle-
that rises to the sky-
al cielo- donde hay esperanzas
y sueños de libertad

“¿Qué queremos?
¡Justicia!
¿Cuándo?
¡Ahora!”

Campesinos on the move
coming up north
migrating back to reclaim their land
esta es tu tierra - tienes derechos...
los rancheros son chuecos
pero la marcha los va a enderezar

“¿Qué si? ¿Qué no?
¿Qué como chingados no?”

Gritos y cantos fill the air…

“¡Se ve! ¡Se siente!
¡Los campesinos están presente!”

Todos son Tlatoanis
Hablando, cantando, gritando y marchando con dignidad

“¡La unión hace la fuerza!”

Cuando lleguen a Sacras
Gaba sordo ears will open y oiran!

Generaciones…
vieja y nueva
mano en mano - paso a paso
cambiando rumbos
de malos a buenos
y soñando un futuro mejor…

“¡Sí se puede!
¡Sí se puede!"

Ya con esta me despido
pero no me olvido
de mi gente en la labor
Que con pasos muy unidos
Marcharon con la Unión
De Merced a Sacramento
Y no miento
¡No señor!
Sé que ganaremos
Sé que venceremos

porque…

“¡El pueblo unido!
¡Jamás será vencido!”

“¡El pueblo unido!
¡jamás será vencido!”



I wrote this poem on August 19, 2002 to commemorate a UFW Marcha from Merced to Sacramento.
Here is what the UFW wrote about this action:
"Summer, Fall 2002--The UFW organizes massive public support, including a much-publicized 150-mile march from Merced to Sacramento, to convince then Gov. Gray Davis to sign the UFW-sponsored binding mediation law, the first time the Agricultural Labor Relations Act has been amended since its passage in 1975."




REMEDIOS CASEROS
por Betty Sanchez

Durante mi infancia
Y adolescencia
Padecí inapetencia
Y por consiguiente
Mi  apariencia era
Frágil y debilucha
Y en consecuencia
Fui victima
de una miríada
De remedios caseros

Ser delgada era sinónimo
De enfermedad
De seguro tiene anemia
O parásitos
Comentaban las vecinas
En la línea de la tortillería
Déle hígado encebollado
Y capsulas de aceite
De bacalao
Y ya verá como en un dos
Por tres se pone gordita
Su chiquilla
Alguna comadre bienintencionada
Opinaba que la cura infalible
Para la desnutrición
Era tomarse un par
De blanquillos crudos
Con delaware (refresco de uva)
O una tasita de cerveza
En ayunas

Mi madre presionada
Por la opinión publica
Se sentía obligada
A seguir tales consejos
Sin importar si eran
Verídicos o inventados

Al cabo del tiempo
Y a fuerza de ser victima
De suplicio mental
Documenté en una libreta
Las torturas

A las que fui sometida
Con el fin de exponer
A mis agresores
En el momento preciso

He aquí
Algunas de mis notas

Malestar estomacal
Agua con carbonato
E infusión de hierbabuena

Dolor de cabeza
Una corona
De ramas de ruda

Ojos lagañosos
Unas gotas de leche de pecho

Piquete de insecto
Fomentos de árnica

Para lo rosado
Maicena

Dolencia dental
Un clavo de olor
Y gárgaras de sal

Espinillas
Un poco de pasta colgate
En el área afectada

Tos y mocos
Té de gordolobo
Y rodajas de cebolla
En el pecho
Me avergüenza
Pensar en las veces
Que fui a la escuela
Oliendo a ceviche

Resfriado
Una olla
De agua hirviendo
Con hojas de eucalipto
Y trapos en el pecho
Previamente calentados
Con la plancha

Retorcijones
No había ninguna duda
De seguro estaba empachada
Lo único efectivo
Eras unos jalones de cuero
En la espalda
Que me hacían
Pedirle al santo niño de atocha
Que me tuviera compasión
Y me recogiera en su seno

Dolores musculares
Ventosas de alcanfor
¿Pueden imaginar peor agonía?

Fiebre
Granos de café
En la planta del pie
Con una cáscara de plátano
Envueltos
En  calcetines de lana

Piojos
No hay mejor remedio
Que el DDT
Así como lo oye
Querido lector
dicloro-difenil-tricloroetano
Un potente pesticida
Para eliminar plagas
Y nubes de insectos
Y cuya vida media
Es de 20 años
Era aplicado a mi sensible
Cuero cabelludo
Hoy que reflexiono en ello
Puedo explicar el porque
He actuado
Incoherentemente
Toda mi vida

Infección  de oído
Un cono de papel
Y fuego
Para sacar el aire

Semblante caído
Señal de hechizo
Un collar de ajos
Y una limpia
Con huevos de rancho
Alejaba los malos espíritus

No podía faltar
el cúralo todo
vicks vaporub
El merthiolate
Que tenia un aplicador
Semejante a un matamoscas
Y la vitacilina
Era tan popular
Que me aprendi
El comercial
Ya lo sabe
En la casa y la oficina
Tenga usted vitacilina
Es muy buena
En rasponcitos
Quemaduras y barritos
Ah que buena medicina

Cicatrices
Hojas de malva machacadas
En el molcajete
Sábila o babas de nopal

Si todo lo demás fallaba
Un sana sana colita de rana
Si no sanas hoy sanarás mañana
Era el consuelo a mis males

Mi padre que poseía
Sentido común
Me llevo a un especialista
Que recetó
Ampolletas de beyodecta
Para aumentar
Los glóbulos rojos
Y comidas pequeñas
Cada tres horas
Para estimular el apetito

FIN DEL ABUSO

En mi edad adulta
Me confieso culpable
De haber aplicado
A mis hijos
Los mismos martirios
Por aquello de que
En cierta manera
Hubieran tenido razón
Mi madre
Abuela
Madrinas
Y vecinas.

Betty Sánchez
9 de Abril de 2015

Betty Sánchez, poeta mexicana, miembro activo de Los Escritores del Nuevo Sol.  Ha particado en varios recitales tales como Noche de Voces Xicanas, Honrando a Facundo Cabral, Colectivo Verso Activo, Poesía Revuelta y Floricantos.

Sus poemas se han publicado en Voces del Nuevo Sol, Mujeres de Maiz y La Bloga.




BLACK SPRING
por Mario Escobar 

Esto no es una metáfora
escucha como se quiebra
el hueso dorsal
del negro Baltimore
Esto no es una metáfora 

escucha como se apagan
los pulmones 

del negro New York
Esto no es una metáfora
Llega el grito con su voz de piedra,
desatando campanas y lágrimas,
implorando: ¡Ya basta!

Esto no es una metáfora
la sangre asciende al corazón
por el dolor inquietante de rostros
desquebrajados 

que los siglos 

ya conocen.

Esto no es una metáfora 

el miedo ha dicho basta

de sus pasos inseguros

y una primavera negra 

despierta

mientras en Washington DC
Loretta Lynch
se une a la gente tuerta

-Mario Escobar 2015


Mario A. Escobar (January 19, 1978-) is a US-Salvadoran writer and poet born in 1978. Although he considers himself first and foremost a poet, he is known as the founder and editor of Izote Press. Escobar is a faculty member in the Department of Foreign Languages at LA Mission College. Some of Escobar’s works include Al correr de la horas (Editorial Patria Perdida, 1999) Gritos Interiores (Cuzcatlan Press, 2005), La Nueva Tendencia (Cuzcatlan Press, 2005), Paciente 1980 (Orbis Press, 2012). His bilingual poetry appears in Theatre Under My Skin: Contemporary Salvadoran Poetry by Kalina Press.




2016 Américo Paredes Conference Call for Proposals

La Bloga-Tuesday omitted last week this link to the detailed call for panels, proposals. Roberto Cantu organizes the West Coast's most compelling C/S academic conferences. In hopes scholars will find investigatory riches in the subject of Américo Paredes' work and tradition, here's the missing link:
http://americoatcalstatela.blogspot.com/



To Read in Venice


La Bloga friend Yago S. Cura sends along the poster and invitation to a reading Hinchas de Poesia is sponsoring in conjunction with Gus Harper gallery. Yago writes:

Four writers will be taking the stage to read their work: Romus Simpson, Claudia D. Hernandez, Ruben Cruz, and Angel Garcia.

This is the second reading in a series. Also, on Friday, May 15th we will be screening, "Crying Earth, Rise Up" followed by a Q&A by the director, Suree Towfighnia.