• Contact
  • Legal Pages
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • DMCA
    • Cookie Privacy Policy
    • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
No Result
View All Result
Friday, December 5, 2025
The American News
ADVERTISEMENT
No Result
View All Result
The American News
No Result
View All Result

Puerto Rican poet finds strength in vulnerability – The Oswegonian

by theamericannews
September 20, 2024
in Puerto Rico
0
Puerto Rican poet finds strength in vulnerability – The Oswegonian
300
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Ricardo Nazario y Colón wears a suit to his formal, professional dealings in university administration. He did the same in Penfield Library, not to officiate a meeting, but for his other passion: poetry.

“Writing is therapeutic,” Nazario y Colón said. “Especially if you cannot afford a therapist.” The audience giggled in response.

Nazario y Colón, the chief diversity officer for the SUNY system, found it natural to read his vulnerable poetry in front of an audience—he has been writing poetry since the early ‘90s. He has an anecdote about sitting on the arm of his mother’s sofa and his mother grabbing his manuscript lying on a chair. Nazario y Colón remembers hearing his mother’s whispers, reading each poem, until she asked, “Did my ma tell you that?” She set the papers down and left the room.

“At that point I knew it was OK to write about anything,” Nazario y Colón said. “I went into publication with a sense of relief.”

As part of a series on Latino masculinity and poetry, Nazario y Colón presented his poetry to students at Penfield Library, as well as his story of learning to articulate and navigate identity. 

His poetry delves into the intersection of race and gender, of masculinity and being Afroboricua, or Puerto Rican of African descent.

The legacy of colonialism, Nazario y Colón explained, lives on through a stigma of African ancestry. While in the U.S. colonialism continued through racial segregation and laws against interracial marriages, in Latin America, people of color were pressured to marry into white Spaniard families to disguise blackness from their bloodline.

Nazario y Colón found it imperative to “ascribe positiveness to blackness” in his poetry.

“There is a saying in the Caribbean: ‘Where is your grandmother? ¿Dónde está tu abuela?’ Nazario y Colón said. “En la cocina. In the kitchen. You never let her come out.”

Roberta Hurtado, the director of Latin American studies at SUNY Oswego, and librarian Michelle Bishop invited Nazario y Colón to speak with students of Hortado’s junior seminar. Hurtado found it important for students to see the several dimensions of university faculty.

“When we have people who are making decisions for education,” Hurtado said, “we want people who can see what’s happening and also be creative and thoughtful about the approaches we can take.”

The series of talks, titled “No Bad Hombres,” was inspired by Hurtado’s frustration with the lack of positive, accurate representation of Latino men in the media. 

“There’s really no representation of Latinos who are artistic,” Hurtado said. “And poetic and who are raising their families. How do we bring that representation to Oswego?”

A grant from the Library of America funded the series, which consists of four talks by four Latino poets, two in the fall and two in the spring. 

The title “No Bad Hombres” calls to mind remarks by former president Donald Trump about deporting “bad hombres,” a statement critics took as reinforcing stereotypes of Latino men as aggressive and violent.

As Nazario y Colón spoke on masculinity and vulnerability he reminisced on growing up with his brother in the Puerto Rican highlands. His poem “Making Dough” is about his relationship with his brother, with whom he shared a lack of a father figure.

To break from the unemotional, unaffectionate nature of machismo, Nazario y Colón started kissing his brother on the cheek.

“To this day now, when we speak on the phone, we tell each other we love each other, we express how much we care,” Nazario y Colón said. “But it took an intentional act that in a way was a little bit revolting to him because he wasn’t raised this kind of way.”

Nazario y Colón said he is now much more willing to tell his male friends and family that he loves them, as an assertion of masculinity, not a rejection.

The poet’s openness resonated with attendees.

“I like the way he used his poetry and art to convey the thoughts, his processes about what it means to form identity,” Sky Minkoff, a student, said.

“It’s always very wonderful to hear these different stories that differ so much from my life,” Delaney Hillman, another student, said, “because it really puts my world more into perspective.”

“There’s a generosity in bringing that into a space like this,” Laura Donnelly, chair of the English and creative writing department, said. “And also another kind of vulnerability and bravery at the same time.”

The location of the talk at Penfield Library felt special to Nazario y Colón, given that his elementary school librarian, “Mrs. Rosa,” was an important influence on his writing. In fact, because of the event, he was able to find that after she left Puerto Rico in the ‘70s, she moved to Rochester. 

Mrs. Rosa just celebrated her 91st birthday.

Photo from State University of New York

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

Source link : http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=66ede594cb794eb1be4875d7ed7ffd82&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.oswegonian.com%2F2024%2F09%2F20%2Fpuerto-rican-poet-finds-strength-in-vulnerability%2F&c=5091328110337355997&mkt=en-us

Author :

Publish date : 2024-09-20 09:11:00

Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.

Tags: AmericaPuerto Rico
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

America needs a holiday to recognize immigrants

Next Post

Honoring the Legacy of Roberto Clemente – The Oberlin Review

Next Post
Honoring the Legacy of Roberto Clemente – The Oberlin Review

Honoring the Legacy of Roberto Clemente – The Oberlin Review

Discovering the Untold Story: The 50-Year Quest for the U.S. Purchase of the Virgin Islands
US Virgin Islands

Discovering the Untold Story: The 50-Year Quest for the U.S. Purchase of the Virgin Islands

by Ethan Riley
December 5, 2025
0

In a bold and transformative step in 1917, the U.S. acquired the U.S. Virgin Islands from Denmark after nearly fifty...

Read more
Lawmakers Demand War Powers Vote as Tensions Rise Over Trump’s Venezuela Threat

Lawmakers Demand War Powers Vote as Tensions Rise Over Trump’s Venezuela Threat

December 5, 2025
Alabama’s Automakers Prepare for Trump’s Tariffs: A Bold New Strategy Unfolds!

Alabama’s Automakers Prepare for Trump’s Tariffs: A Bold New Strategy Unfolds!

December 5, 2025
Heartbreaking Tragedy Exposes Critical Failures in America’s Pedestrian Safety

Heartbreaking Tragedy Exposes Critical Failures in America’s Pedestrian Safety

December 4, 2025
Uncover the Caribbean’s Best-Kept Secret: The Island Everyone is Talking About for Its Safety!

Uncover the Caribbean’s Best-Kept Secret: The Island Everyone is Talking About for Its Safety!

December 4, 2025
Antigua and Barbuda Poised to Shine as the Caribbean’s Second Fastest Growing Economy!

Antigua and Barbuda Poised to Shine as the Caribbean’s Second Fastest Growing Economy!

December 4, 2025
Exciting News: Aruba Reopens Its Borders to Latin America on December 1!

Exciting News: Aruba Reopens Its Borders to Latin America on December 1!

December 4, 2025
Urgent Warning: US Tariffs Could Jeopardize Bahamas’ Trade and Tourism!

Urgent Warning: US Tariffs Could Jeopardize Bahamas’ Trade and Tourism!

December 4, 2025
Barbados Welcomes a Tourism Boom as the US Overtakes the UK in Visitor Numbers for 2025!

Barbados Welcomes a Tourism Boom as the US Overtakes the UK in Visitor Numbers for 2025!

December 4, 2025
Peak Re Launches Thrilling New Venture in North America!

Peak Re Launches Thrilling New Venture in North America!

December 4, 2025

Categories

Archives

December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Nov    
  • Blog
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • The American News

© 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Blog
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • The American News

© 2024

Go to mobile version

1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 * . *