As a follow-up
to yesterday’s press release announcing a new partnership between Notre Dame’s
Institute for Latino Studies and Notre Dame’s Creative Writing Program, Letras Latinas Blog would like to flesh
out a bit the “story behind the story.” For example: what, exactly, was meant by saying that MFA alum Lauro Vazquez “was the
model” for this new Latino Studies assistantship? Quite simply, this: Lauro was
able to work for Letras Latinas (and receive a modest stipend in return) during
his time as a Notre Dame MFA student because of an ad-hoc, one-time-only
arrangement between The Graduate School and the Institute for Latino
Studies. It was an experiment of sorts: Letras
Latinas had never had a graduate student assistant, let alone a promising poet enrolled in ND’s MFA program. Yesterday’s release meant to
highlight the beginning of a more formal arrangement and give it some context (highlighting Lauro in
large part). What follows is more
context—a fuller, more complete picture.
If anything, I'd like to consider it a piece whose audience is: Latino/a poets
applying to MFA programs this year. —FA
MFA
Testimonio
by Lauro
Vazquez
Yesterday
I was hanging out with Thade Correa,
who also graduated from Notre Dame’s MFA program last spring. And in talking
about our MFA experience I had the following thought: If one starts with the
presumption that an MFA experience is judged by the quality of the poems one
leaves with, then I think I might—contrary to what winning the Sparks
Fellowship suggests—have fared quite poorly (I’m saying this with a batch of
rejections in my left hand).
But
if on the other hand—my right hand, my “shaking hands” hand for example—one
judges the experience based on meaningful relationships that were born of that
hand, then I think I might have fared, and will fare quite well. What I am trying to say is that I left the
program with a solid network of people who I feel are invested in my work and
growth. This is the kind of growth that can’t really be measured, it’s an
inward growth and I’ve been lucky enough to experience it.
I’ve
been fortunate, overall, to have had really great mentors and teachers along
the way. I was lucky, for instance, to
have been admitted to the first CantoMundo gathering back in 2010, this was
before I did the MFA program and my identity as a poet was just starting to
coalesce. Well, some of the poems that I wrote in Albuquerque that summer ended
up in my application for Notre Dame’s MFA program. I think Joyelle McSweeney was a huge champion and believer of those early
poems, which I presumed were good enough to convince (or trick?) her into
advocating for my admission into Notre Dame’s program.
I
had written on my Facebook page, shortly after graduating, that I was very
happy to have had studied under “Master Poets” Joyelle McSweeney, Orlando R. Menes, and Johannes
Göransson, who are on the permanent faculty there. But
also Susan
Blackwell Ramsey, who was a
visiting faculty member. And I really do feel that way, that these are master
poets, and so each one, in his or her own way, was fundamental in nourishing
those early poems into what Orlando has generously called a “sophisticated
fusion of myth and history.”
With Joyelle, for example, I felt free to
explore and conceive of poetry in many other ways than just as what is on the
page. Joyelle has an amazing ability to enter into your poems and to wear them
like clothes, and to force them to walk out into the world.
Joyelle McSweeney
Johannes’ interest in the kitsch also prodded me into thinking deeply about the
relationship between poetry and aesthetics, his interest in translation—particularly
“weird” or “impossible” translations—opened up my language and reading of
poetry to fascinating wordplay.
Johannes
Görannsson
Orlando Menes
And, finally, Susan’s ardent belief in the
power of stories and narrative (and humor, which I am still trying to master)
gave me the tools to do what I am trying to do.
Susan Blackwell Ramsey
And what I am trying to do, on the surface, might seem simple:
and that is the very human need to tell these stories, these marvelous lies
that tell the truth behind the lives of certain historical figures. Figures
that have left their mark on my imagination and whose stories I just need to
tell: everyone from Nicaragua’s Augusto Cesar Sandino; to Chicago’s Haymarket
Martyrs; to Lucy Gonzalez Parsons, who was born a slave in Texas and later went
on to be an anarchist in Chicago; to William Lamport—an Irishman condemned to
death by the Inquisition in 17th century Mexico and whose life gave
birth to the fictional myth of McCully’s Zorro.
And
so, if you’re a Latino/a poet who’s applying, or thinking about applying, to an MFA
program with an eye towards enrolling next Fall, do consider Notre Dame: perhaps
you’ll get to work with these fine mentors, as I was lucky enough to.
November
16, 2013
Chicago,
IL
2 comments:
Ah, Lauro, you did not "trick" anyone into admitting you. I know that this is your humility speaking, but you were writing excellent and promising poems before Notre Dame. I heard them at CantoMundo... and to be admitted to CM before grad school is uncommon. Notre Dame's MFA program was lucky to have you, just as your gratitude for your mentors is evident here. No doubt it was a mutual relationship. And no doubt your contributions to Letras Latinas have been enormous... enormous enough to model this great new initiative that will help future poets. I recall reading your posts your first year in the MFA program with admiration. Kudos to Francisco for creating this collaboration between Letras Latinas and the MFA program. And congratulations, Lauro, for your many accomplishments in such a short time.
Ah, Lauro, you did not "trick" anyone into admitting you. I know that this is your humility speaking, but you were writing excellent and promising poems before Notre Dame. I heard them at CantoMundo... and to be admitted to CM before grad school is uncommon. Notre Dame's MFA program was lucky to have you, just as your gratitude for your mentors is evident here. No doubt it was a mutual relationship. And no doubt your contributions to Letras Latinas have been enormous... enormous enough to model this great new initiative that will help future poets. I recall reading your posts your first year in the MFA program with admiration. Kudos to Francisco for creating this collaboration between Letras Latinas and the MFA program. And congratulations, Lauro, for your many accomplishments in such a short time.
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