Search Results for: Jonathan Marcantoni
Jonathan Marcantoni’s THE FEAST OF SAN SEBASTIAN Triumphs
Editor’ Note: A few of us here at Latino Rebels have read Jonathan Marcantoni’s book, so we decided to write a review. Jonathan is also one of our newest contributors, so we welcome him to the group, and while you’re at it, go get his book and read it! In his 1989 essay “Stalking the […]
A New Play About Puerto Rico’s Cerro Maravilla Tragedy Seeks to Make a Mark in Colorado
Puerto Rican Nocturne investigates the nature of power, the limits of ideology, and the search for autonomy and peace in a colonized society.
La Casita Grande Editores Is Calling for Latino and Caribbean Literature Submissions
“At LCG, publishing is not just a matter of a releasing a book, it is a matter of developing a whole artist ready to take on the world.”
Statehood of Confusion
After the passage of the PROMESA bill, even Puerto Rico’s estadistas shouldn’t celebrate the 4th of July.
Latinos for Trump and the Neocolonial Mindset
Many Latinos, even immigrants, share one major quality in common with the Republican presidential nominee: extreme patriotism.
Of Trump, Chicago and What People Are Getting Wrong
What happened in Chicago last Friday night was a communication breakdown.
A Latin American Struggling in a US Latino Diaspora
What it’s like to be from the outside but now inside and looking back out.
Puerto Rico al borde del abismo
“El 1 de diciembre fue un día ínfamo en nuestra historia. A ver nuestro gobernador dar limosnas a nuestro maestro colonial era una vergüenza profunda e imperdonable.”
There Are No Safe Zones in Art
“The intersection between art and politics has always been fraught with land mines and dismembered limbs of the well-intentioned.”
‘Barrio Imbroglio’: Daniel Cubias on Writing a Detective Novel
A conversation with Daniel Cubias, author of the new detective novel ‘Barrio Imbroglio,’ on writing, Latino authors and self-publishing.
Why the Latino Revolution May Never Happen
Do Latinos have the will to effect the kind of radical changes this country needs?
What We Owe Columbus (And What We Don’t)
By still celebrating Columbus Day, we focus our reverence on the wrong people and actions. October 12 belongs not to the conquistadors, but to the people of the Americas.
Entrevista con Edgardo Jusino-Campos, autor de ‘El harapiento de Betzaida’
Una conversación con el autor de su novela, las actualidades en Puerto Rico y la literatura latinoamericana
How Native Speakers Ruined Spanish for Everyone Else
Constant criticism from native Spanish speakers discourages non-speaking Latinos from learning the language
The Diversity Problem: Interview with Linda Nieves-Powell, author of ‘Yo Soy Latina’
The author talks about her play and the diversity problem perpetuated even within the Latino community
Interview with Prize-Winning Author Chris Campanioni
An interview with the ILBA and Academy of American Poet’s Prize-Winning author Chris Campanioni
‘Who’s Ju?’
An interview with award-winning author Dania Ramos
Kings of 7th Avenue: A New Era of Puerto Rican Literature
Puerto Rican neo-fiction seeks to address the social and psychological problems that afflict modern Puerto Rico, whether in regard to ‘self-racism,’ neo-colonialism, foreign influence, identity crisis and the effects of issues that have afflicted the island for the last two hundred years. The genre would not be bound by single traditional genres such as horror […]
Kings of 7th Avenue: Mami Dearest
—Pues primo, titi’s behavior is what happens in colonial societies. You don’t learn to value yourself let alone other people. Your mom is an empty shell full of rah-rah American bullshit fed to young Puerto Ricans that tells them they can never be satisfied unless they chase the American dream and leave the island behind. […]
Kings of 7th Avenue: Latin Pigs
In Latino literature and film, a common narrative is assimilation, where the protagonist wrestles with preserving the “traditional value” of the old world while embracing the “progress and enlightenment” of the new. By the end, even as the protagonist learns to appreciate and respect the values of their elders, what they really embrace and love are […]
Puerto Ricans Need Institutions They Can Trust
When I was an undergrad at the University of Tampa, one of my Latin American History professors made the point that the wars of independence in the 19th century were not so much popular rebellions as they were one social class (the Criollos, or direct Spanish descendants born and raised in the Americas) fighting another (the […]