Friday, February 28, 2020

Striving To Do Better



Doing arts programming can be—is messy. I’m referring, in this instance, to curating and creating spaces, platforms—pick your term—for writers to share their work in community spaces.

At last year’s AWP conference in Portland, something unfortunate unfolded, where off-site events are concerned. Two membership organizations with similar missions held off-site readings that directly competed with one another.

This year, for San Antonio, Letras Latinas attempted to bring these two orgs together to put on an event in collaboration with one another—specifically, a One Poem Festival, under the auspices of these two orgs: CantoMundo and Macondo; and Letras Latinas.

The aim was to curate 20 reading slots: 

7 for CandoMundo
7 for Macondo
6 for Letras Latinas

Each org was given autonomy to curate their slots as they saw fit, presumably, among their membership. Letras Latinas, which is not a membership organization, assigned itself the task of reaching out to Latinx poets who were neither CantoMundo nor Macondo fellows, but who had, in the past, been involved in a Letras Latinas event or initiative.

Its six slots went to poets with ties to the following communities:

Puerto Rican
Queer (2)
Honduran
Argentine
Mexican/Chicanx
Colombian

When all three orgs brought their rosters together and this information was passed on to our poster designer, our failure, in my view, was not pausing and looking at our roster of 20 readers and asking the question:

What community is missing?

And then re-vising our efforts accordingly. We all have blind spots.

It may be (though this is not an excuse) that Letras Latinas did not ask this question, where Afro-Latinx poets, is concerned, because Letras Latinas has been mindful on this score in the past; and our national first book prize for Latinx poetry is currently being judged and screened by three Afro-Latinx poets.

BUT: 

by not asking the question, Letras Latinas dropped the ball. 

We apologize and pledge to do better in the future.

That said, Letras Latinas’ revised roster of  6 poets, for the upcoming One Poem Festival in San Antonio next Thursday, does now include an Afro-Latinx poet.

We still hold out hope that the full roster will include more.

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