Ruben Quesada is an American poet and critic. He was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. [1] He is the winner of the 2023 Barrow Street Editors Prize.
In 2022, Quesada published an award-winning anthology, Latinx Poetics: Essays on the Art of Poetry, by University of New Mexico Press. It "explores the ways in which a people's history and language are vital to the development of a poet's imagination and insists that the meaning and value of poetry are necessary to understand the history and future of a people." [2]
His poetry appears in The Best American Poetry [3] and has earned multiple Pushcart Prize nominations; his writing and criticism appear in The New York Times, [4] Harvard Review , Guernica , The American Poetry Review , TriQuarterly , Ploughshares , [5] Kirkus Reviews and Cimarron Review .
Quesada is the founder of the Latinx Writers Caucus at the Association of Writing & Writing Programs (AWP). Its initial advisory board included founding members of CantoMundo Poetry, Macondo Writers, and Letras Latinas. The caucus is dedicated to supporting Latinx and Latin American writers throughout their careers.
Quesada has taught Latinx literature, literary translation, editing, and creative writing [6] at several institutions, including Northwestern University, [7] The School of the Art Institute, [8] Vermont College of Fine Arts, and Columbia College Chicago.
In 2018, Quesada published a chapbook of original poetry and literary translations of Spanish poet Luis Cernuda titled Revelations, [9] inspired by the medieval book by Christian mystic Julian of Norwich, Revelations of Divine Love . He is also author of Next Extinct Mammal (Greenhouse Review Press, 2011), and translator of Luis Cernuda: Exiled from the Throne of Night (Aureole Press, 2008). [10]
In 2023, The Offending Adam published a digital chapbook of poems titled Jane / La Segua. The poems reinvent La Segua, a colonial myth rooted in racism and class from Costa Rica.
Quesada has been involved in various literary organizations and initiatives, including serving as an advisor for Maps to the Next World, a literary initiative from the Smithsonian Institution. He serves on the board of the National Book Critics Circle and as VP of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) [11] from 2021 - 2023. He was also the Chair of the award in nonfiction for the 2022 publishing year. In 2021, he launched and served as the host of the Mercy Street Reading Series, a live literary broadcast featuring contemporary poets and writers.
He is currently an editorial advisor for Jack Leg Press and teaches as an Associate Teaching Fellow at the Attic Institute of Arts & Letters, and he is faculty in the low residency MFA in Creative Writing programs at Antioch University-Los Angeles [12] and Cedar Crest College [13] .
Brutal Companion (Barrow Street Press, 2024) ISBN 978-1-962131-03-2
Next Extinct Mammal (Greenhouse Review Press, 2011) ISBN 978-0965523998
Jane / La Segua (The Offending Adam, 2023)
Revelations (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2018) ISBN 1-943977-54-2
Exiled from the Throne of Night: Selected Translations of Luis Cernuda (Aureole Press, 2008)
Latinx Poetics: Essays on the Art of Poetry (University of New Mexico Press, 2022) ISBN 0-8263-6438-1
Vicente Pío Marcelino Cirilo Aleixandre y Merlo was a Spanish poet who was born in Seville. Aleixandre received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1977 "for a creative poetic writing which illuminates man's condition in the cosmos and in present-day society, at the same time representing the great renewal of the traditions of Spanish poetry between the wars". He was part of the Generation of '27.
Luis Cernuda Bidón was a Spanish poet, a member of the Generation of '27. During the Spanish Civil War, in early 1938, he went to the UK to deliver some lectures and this became the start of an exile that lasted till the end of his life. He taught in the universities of Glasgow and Cambridge before moving in 1947 to the US. In the 1950s he moved to Mexico. While he continued to write poetry, he also published wide-ranging books of critical essays, covering French, English and German as well as Spanish literature. He was frank about his homosexuality at a time when this was problematic and became something of a role model for this in Spain. His collected poems were published under the title La realidad y el deseo.
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Latino literature is literature written by people of Latin American ancestry, often but not always in English, most notably by Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans, and Dominican Americans, many of whom were born in the United States. The origin of the term "Latino literature" dates back to the 1960s, during the Chicano Movement, which was a social and political movement by Mexican Americans seeking equal rights and representation. At the time, the term "Chicano literature" was used to describe the work of Mexican-American writers. As the movement expanded, the term "Latino" came into use to encompass writers of various Latin American backgrounds, including Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, and others.
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