MEMBER BLOG TAG: mexico
| Tuesday, January 31, 2012 7:14AM | | | | Voices Around the World | Tags: Freedom of Expression, PEN, writers, China, Ethiopia, Mexico, Myanmar, Uzbekistan, the Cameroons, India, Liu Xiaobo, Zhu Yufu, Chen Wei, Chen Xi, , Salman Rushdie, , Aung San Sui, Kyi, Joanne Leedom-Ackerman
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Each month notices of writers under threat come across my desk. I find myself studying the pictures of the writers when there are pictures, writing down their names, and when available, reading some of their work to make them real in my own mind and imagination and later to share their work, which governments hope to silence. Along with other members of PEN I write appeals on their behalf with no definitive measure of how effective these are, but over time the accumulation of protests from writers and others around the world does push open consciousness and prison doors.
In the past month, writers have been imprisoned with long sentences in China,... | | | | | | | Saturday, April 25, 2009 12:00AM | | | | Le Clezio and Adam Gopnik | Tags: Le Clezio, Creolization, spam, New Mexico, landscape, language as life
| | | Pen pointed out that we are celebrating World Voices while the rest of the world is putting up its hands in defeat... So this is the celebration. Nice to hear Le Clezio speaking of looking out his window in Albuquerque and seeing tumbleweed: that's very delightful, since when we look out of OUR window we see other buildings. And just as nice to hear about where his family has settled, that "we are nearly everywhere."
Creolization, he says, is a great thing, since it means adaptation to new ways of life... He remembers begging the GI's for food, having subsisted on roots, and being given Spam, chewing gum, and white bread.
As for belonging... | | | | | | | Friday, May 2, 2008 1:18PM | | | | Personal narrative and public.... | Tags: Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras, South of the Border, Brooklyn, nomads, private, public, marginal, autobiography, imagination, women writers.
| | | Mexican novelist Carmen Boullosa and Honduras/El Salvador author Horacio Castallanos novelist and journalists both read a passage from a novel in English, and then sat down for a talk with playwright Nathalie Handal.
Nathalie Handal kicked off the exchange with a funny and revealing anecdote: Carmen Boullosa had just published a novel that was getting a lot of attention, and one of Mexico City famous critics called her up and said, you have to send me a new copy of your book immediately. I am missing five pages, and I can't wait to finish your book. By the way I really enjoyed when your mother made love to a priest! Boullosa was stunned: "it's a novel," she said. "I's not about my mother. My... | | | | | |
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