Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2907029173> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 66 of
66
with 100 items per page.
- W2907029173 endingPage "125" @default.
- W2907029173 startingPage "115" @default.
- W2907029173 abstract "Let's Be Unyoked from Landscapes:Travel and Place(s) in the Poetry of Rane Arroyo Betsy A. Sandlin Award-winning poet, playwright, short story writer, and scholar Rane Arroyo (1954–2010) authored a long list of books yet has received little critical attention to date.1 Born in Chicago to Puerto Rican parents, Arroyo earned a PhD at the University of Pittsburgh and later relocated to Ohio, where he taught English and Creative Writing at the University of Toledo until his untimely death. His 11 collections of poetry are especially notable for their often-humorous and colloquial engagement with popular culture in the United States, their experimentation with form, and their largely autobiographical and self-reflexive meditations on identity, influenced by his own life experiences as an openly gay, Puerto Rican man of working-class roots who navigated many predominantly Anglo and heteronormative spaces throughout his life. In a footnote, Marc Zimmerman proclaims that Arroyo may indeed be the most prolific and most important of the Chicago Puerto Rican poets (154). Notwithstanding a prolific literary career and prestigious prizes and recognition, Arroyo remains mainly in the footnotes, so to speak, in the shadows of both Latinx and broader U.S. literary criticism. One explanation for his absence is that Arroyo's work defies stereotypical understandings or expectations of Latinx literature and, more specifically, Puerto Rican literature written in the U.S. His poetry is not filled with code-switching or Spanglish nor does it present an urban experience like that which is easily recognized in Nuyorican texts. Furthermore, the cultural touchpoints in Arroyo's work include as many references to Broadway and Bruce Springsteen as to salsa music, as much influence from Buddhism as from Catholicism, as much Hart Crane and Emily Dickinson as Federico García Lorca or Reinaldo Arenas.2 There is very little nostalgia present in his writing, and there are as many playful and absurd meditations on the self in his poetry as there are serious ones. As Luis Urrea states in his introduction to Arroyo's collected poems, The Buried Sea, The brother just doesn't sound like anybody else in the Latino crowd (xii). Urrea concludes, He is not a 'Latino' poet. He is a world poet who is Latino (xiv). Arroyo's poetry deserves a larger posthumous audience and increased critical attention, particularly for its destabilization of the prevalent notion that a strong sense of place is a defining feature of Latinx literary production past and present, an idea that has been discussed widely by literary critics and literary historians and that stubbornly prevails in studies of Latinx cultural production in the 21st century, despite globalization and [End Page 115] challenges to theories of place-based identification. It is a poetry … that tries to reconcile geographic specificity … with cosmopolitanism, according to Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes and colleagues (144). While Arroyo certainly claimed a birthplace (Chicago), a stable residence for most of his professional life (Toledo, Ohio), and a place of familial and cultural origin (Puerto Rico), his poetic production as a whole reveals a clear preference for wandering through a multiplicity of places rather than identifying with any particular place or places. Likewise, his work refuses to identify with a strictly binary geography, which forms the backbone of many configurations of Latinx and diasporic identities, including the writing of Latinx authors who describe lives on the hyphen (Mexican-American, Cuban-American, etc.), as suggested by Gustavo Pérez Firmat. In other words, Arroyo's poetry is not limited to what Vanessa Pérez Rosario describes as a double consciousness, which she argues is typical for Hispanic Caribbean literature written in the U.S. In his own introduction to The Buried Sea, Arroyo attempted a list of identifiers that would capture his complexity. He wrote: I'm a Puerto Rican, gay, Midwestern, educated, former working class, liberal, atheistic, humanist, American, male, ex-Mormon, ex-Catholic, pseudo-Buddhist, teacher, reader, global, and popular culture-informed poet (2). Nonetheless, Arroyo's poetry questions the stability of his chosen identifiers, particularly the place-based ones, and instead highlights movement through place(s) as fundamental to understanding his latinidad and his literary work. Arroyo's writing, both..." @default.
- W2907029173 created "2019-01-11" @default.
- W2907029173 creator A5011286868 @default.
- W2907029173 date "2018-01-01" @default.
- W2907029173 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2907029173 title "Let's Be Unyoked from Landscapes: Travel and Place(s) in the Poetry of Rane Arroyo" @default.
- W2907029173 cites W1593035626 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W1801340522 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W2113403298 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W2592380122 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W2618152058 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W2619532199 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W2796327204 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W429676759 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W614265592 @default.
- W2907029173 cites W634842467 @default.
- W2907029173 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/cnf.2018.0043" @default.
- W2907029173 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2907029173 type Work @default.
- W2907029173 sameAs 2907029173 @default.
- W2907029173 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2907029173 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2907029173 hasAuthorship W2907029173A5011286868 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C142932270 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C164913051 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C19165224 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C2778355321 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C3018241854 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C7991579 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C107038049 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C124952713 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C142362112 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C142932270 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C144024400 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C164913051 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C19165224 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C2778355321 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C3018241854 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C7991579 @default.
- W2907029173 hasConceptScore W2907029173C95457728 @default.
- W2907029173 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W2907029173 hasLocation W29070291731 @default.
- W2907029173 hasOpenAccess W2907029173 @default.
- W2907029173 hasPrimaryLocation W29070291731 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W1917467521 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2354722052 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2359853589 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2364055278 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2367740350 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2374219176 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2377458366 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2386153044 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2907029173 hasRelatedWork W2765432590 @default.
- W2907029173 hasVolume "34" @default.
- W2907029173 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2907029173 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2907029173 magId "2907029173" @default.
- W2907029173 workType "article" @default.