Rosa Martha Zárate Macías accepted an ILBA Gold Medal for Our Grandfathers Were Braceros / Nuestros Abuelos Fueron Braceros on behalf of herself and co-author Abel Astorga Morales. She emphasized the importance of photos and firsthand testimony by Braceros about the labor conditions during the Bracero Program, the ongoing struggle for compensation by Braceros and their surviving family members, and the need to change current laws to improve the rights of people categorized as temporary workers. Click below to watch Rosa Martha accept the ILBA and speak starting at 59:50.
0 Comments
Tell Us How We are Doing!Somos en escrito wants to know our readers better. The questionnaire is short, click our logo or this link. Thank you!
Contest submission is free and is open for any Native or Latina/o/x person from or residing in the USA (of American Indian, Chicano/Mexican American, Puerto Rican, Cuban American, Dominican American, Central American, or South American origin).
Manuscripts must be unpublished, in English, Spanish, or Ingléspañol. Put “2022 Extra-Fiction Contest” in the email subject line. Email Word format (.docx) unpublished submissions with short bio in third person in separate Word attachment and author’s photo (label your name, not author photo) to somosenescrito@gmail.com. One submission per author, 6,000 word limit, contact us beforehand if the submission is over 6,000 words. Submission is free. Deadline is October 31, 2022. Speculative-fiction stories published in Somos en escrito during the year are considered for the contest. Judging the finalists is Ernest Hogan, godfather of Chicano Science-Fiction and author of Cortez on Jupiter, High Aztech, and Smoking Mirror Blues. Prizes: 1st place: $100 and a copy of El Porvenir, ¡Ya! Chicano Sci-fi Anthology. 2nd place: Copy of El Porvenir, ¡Ya!. 3rd place: Copy of El Porvenir, ¡Ya!. Two Honorary Mentions. All Finalists will have their stories published online in Somos en escrito Literary Magazine. Somos en escrito is pleased to share that El Porvenir, ¡Ya! is a finalist in The Next Generation Indie Book Awards for anthologies!
Palabras del Pueblo Writing Workshop is intended be financially accessible for raza to learn to better express themselves so our existence and values can be heard with clarity with no doubts to what they are and what we are. We intend the workshop to be a place to acquire tools, inspiration, and contacts for Chicana/o/x writers. When & Where?Classes will be held online on two long weekends (Friday, Saturday and Sunday): July 22-24 and 29-31 during the summer of 2022. Classes OfferedWe are offering a creative nonfiction class this year in which you will learn about the art of the personal essay, expository essay with a team of three experienced and published instructors: Berte Reyes, Dr. Ernesto Mireles and Dave Weinstock. Students should come with three ideas they can write about. Nonfiction Class Teachers ![]() Ernesto Todd Mireles, MSW. Ph.D. has worked as a student, community, union, and electoral organizer. Coordinator of the Frantz Fanon Community Strategy Center at Prescott College, he organized for the United Farm Workers, United Steelworkers and American Federation of Teachers. Mireles is the co-director of the Social Justice Community Organizing Masters program where he teaches community organizing. He holds an MSW in organizational and community practice and a Ph.D. American Studies from Michigan State University. His book Insurgent Aztlan was awarded an International Latino Book Award this year placing second in the Best Political/Current Affairs category. Mireles does a weekly podcast called The Reality Dysfunction and is completing a documentary about student organizing called War of the Flea. ![]() Berte Reyes is a Ph.D. candidate in Rhetoric, Composition, and the Teaching of English at the University of Arizona. Between studying hate and video game communities, they write fiction and poetry. They also cause a ruckus whenever necessary. ![]() Born in Evanston, Illinois, Dave Weinstock grew up on a family-owned, organic dairy goat farm in southeastern Pennsylvania. He would join the first and second of the three unions he would belong to in his lifetime while earning the money to pay for his college education at Penn State University. The third union, the Michigan Education Association, he would join years later when he became a journalism professor at Central Michigan University. Three months after graduating from Penn State, Weinstock joined the Pennsylvania State Grange, then the state's largest farm organization, as its public relations director. Two of the three state Grange masters he served in that role taught him how state and federal government and land grant universities functioned and how to successfully execute local, state and federal political agendas. This knowledge would inform the legislative beat he covered for his next employer, Michigan Farmer Magazine, in Lansing, Michigan. There, he won four reporting and two photojournalism awards, added the livestock and forestry beats to his work history and left as the magazine's managing editor. In his next post, he parlayed an adjunct teaching position at Michigan State University into ultimately being admitted to its Mass Media Ph.D. program, which eventually awarded him an integrated Ph.D. in journalism and telecommunication. The next 20 years of his life would reveal his second obsession beyond journalism: teaching it to college students, which he did at three universities in Michigan and Texas. His community service includes two years on MeXicanos 2070's board of directors, four years on a Michigan township planning commission, six years as a Michigan 4-H livestock club leader and four years on two synagogue boards of directors. Currently, he splits his professional life between two glorious endeavors: building the Colegio Chicanos del Pueblo and continuing to honor the U.S. Constitution and the First Amendment with his continued pursuit of journalism and journalism education. Who we arePalabras del Pueblo Writing Workshop is a collaboration with Somos en escrito Literary Foundation and MeXicanos 2070.
Somos en escrito Literary Foundation is a small press and literary magazine dedicated to nurturing and raising awareness of raza writers. Started by Armando Rendon in 2009, several of its publications have placed in the International Latino Book Awards. MeXicanos 2070 is a thinkcollective dedicated to preserving and enhancing Mexican American culture. Comes see us at Medicine for Nightmares Bookstore in San Francisco for the launch of El Porvenir, ¡Ya! the first Chicano sci-fi anthology! Contributors and editors Armando Rendon, Scott Russell Duncan, and Ricardo Tavarez will be there live and Carmen Baca, Martin Hill Ortiz, and Ernest Hogan will Zoom in and be projected on a screen. A group interview will be conducted by Bay Area writer and editor Michelle Robles-Wallace.
The anthology will be available and Armando will also have copies of 50th anniversary Chicano Manifesto. If you can't make it, be sure to check out the live video on our Facebook page. https://fb.me/e/1ha91kAwP Chicanofuturism is now! Born January 21, 1929 Died April 19, 2022 The Editors of Somos en escrito Magazine extend their condolences to the family and friends of Rolando Hinojosa-Smith. Rolando Hinojosa has been one of the most prolific Chicano writers over the past 50 years with much of his work set against the backdrop of a fictional small town, Klail City, that he created in south Texas. He sought to portray his hometown, Mercedes, Texas, from the perspective of being one with the land and the people. At the same time, he projected the universality of life along the border. An essayist, poet and teacher as well, Rolando taught writing as Ellen Clayton Garwood professor at the University of Texas at Austin. The National Book Critics Circle honored him in 2013 with its Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award. Hinojosa was the first Chicano author to receive the prestigious Premio Casa de las Américas award for Klail City y sus alrededores (Klail City), and received the third Premio Quinto Sol Annual Prize in 1973 for his work, Estampas del Valle y otras obras. In a lengthy interview published in Americana E-Journal of American Studies in Hungary, Vol. IX, Number 1, Spring 2013, he told the interviewer when asked what he considered the most relevant, either practical or theoretical, aspects that he felt important to share with students: “I teach creative writing at my home institution along with other courses, but in creative writing, I stress reading; we began the class sponsored by Graz University stressing reading. Why? Because reading is imperative; one begins to read, enjoys it, is captivated by it, and one day, begins to write, to create, based, of course, on reading. Some people think that imagination is everything. It isn’t; imagination can only take one so far; one needs to read and to learn from reading and living one’s life and learning how others live.” Is there any other practical wisdom, the interviewer asked, and Hinojosa declared: “Yes. I advise beginning writers to use clear, everyday language. To try not to show off how much one knows. An experienced reader will see through the phoniness of using high-toned language when none is called for. Writing is not about self-aggrandizement, that’s for amateurs. A professional has a story to tell, and learning how to tell it without resorting to pointing to oneself is an important part of writing.” Here is a list of his major works, some in English only, others as “renditions” as he referred to his translations of his Spanish or English writings. We Happy Few. 2006. Dear Rafe/Mi querido Rafa. 2005. Ask a Policeman. 1998. Estampas del Valle. 1994. El condado de Belken: Klail City. 1994. The Useless Servants. 1993. Los amigos de Becky. 1991. Korea Liebes Lieder/Korean Love Songs. 1991. Becky and her Friends. 1990. Klail City. 1987. This Migrant Earth. 1987. Claros varones de Belken. 1986. Dear Rafe. 1985. Partners in Crime. 1985. The Valley. 1983. (Hinojosa's own translation of Estampas del Valle) Rites and Witnesses. 1982. Crossing the Line: The Construction of a Poem. 1981. Mi querido Rafa. 1981. Klail City und Umgebung. 1981. Generaciones y semblanzas. 1979. Generaciones, notas y brechas. 1978. Korean Love Songs. 1978. Klail City y sus alrededores. 1976. Estampas del Valle y otras obras. 1973. Have your voice heard!This study is being conducted to identify key issues and language that will politically mobilize Chicana/o/x peoples in the United States. The hope is by identifying the keywords that aid in political mobilization, political parties specific to the Chicano/Latino community can build mass mobilization campaigns.
The only persons who will know that you participated in this study and survey will be the research team members: principal investigators Ernesto Todd Mireles, Ph.D., and Teofilo Reyes, Ph.D., research assistants Robbie Marquez and Alexander Yanish. Your answers will be confidential. After your responses are recorded, your name and email will be deleted. You will not be identified in any reports or publications resulting from the survey. "the stories behind the story"A zoom session with R. Ch. Garcia on his new novel Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub
4:00–5:30 pm, Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022 Here's your chance to learn about the mythology, history and people that inspired the new Chicano fantasy-sci-fi Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub. Sign up to hear veteran interviewer Annette Leal Mattern* assist Garcia in sharing literary background of the novel, like: Where did you get the ideas for your characters? And do your characters deliver any vital lessons? Are any of the fantasy scenes about real places or true events? Why does the pace of the two parts of the novel vary so much? What aspects of Chicano/mexicano/indio culture do you hope readers take away from the book? [You can also submit questions in advance or on Chat during the Zoom.] Those attending can also: • Win a copy of the novel.
Zoom limited to 25 registrants. Contact the author via his webpage if you want to be added to the wait list. Sign up on Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/rchgarcia-interview-by-annette-leal-mattern-the-stories-behind-the-story-tickets-266169729827 Annette Leal Mattern is a professional PR/Brand Strategist, Published Author, and Language Nerd. "My contract with the viewer is to guide you in learning whatever will make the reading of the book a better experience." Chicanofuturism is now!The title sums up the underlying roots of this collection; it takes Spanish, Nahuatl and English to tell the whole tale. This collection is a coming out party for raza re-interpreters of the past, the now and the future.
The line-up of authors includes: Ernest Hogan, Mario Acevedo, Frank S. Lechuga, Martin Hill Ortiz, Pedro Iniguez, Nicholas Belardes, Armando Rendón, Lizz Huerta, Emmanuel Valtierra, Rios de La Luz, Beatrice Pita, Rosaura Sánchez, R. Ch. Garcia, Ricardo Tavarez, Rosa Martha Villarreal, Carmen Baca, Scott Russell Duncan, Gloria Delgado, and Kathleen Alcalá. TO SCHEDULE INTERVIEWS, READINGS, MORE INFORMATION Contact: editors@somosenescrito.com Listen to a discussion of El Porvenir, ¡Ya! featuring top writers from the collection on the Reality Dysfunction podcast. El Porvenir, ¡Ya! is available in paperback and e-book formats through online distributors, such as Amazon, your favorite bookstore, and at the Somos en escrito online Tienda/Store. Check Bookshop and Barnes & Noble in the coming weeks. Order your copy now and be a part of Chicanofuturism. |
Archives
May 2023
Categories
All
|