LUISA A. IGLORIA
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Grit & Grace: The 43rd Annual ODU Literary Festival

9/27/2020

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We're looking forward to the 43rd Annual ODU Literary Festival, this year offered as virtual programs from 4-8 October. 

This year's theme is "Grit & Grace" - to honor writers, artists, and makers who give us the grace, even hope, living as we do in a world fraught with a myriad difficulties and challenges..

We have a lineup of AMAZING writers— so please mark your calendars and we will see you there!

4 October, Sunday
Thesis/Graduation Readings, Writers in the ODU MFA Creative Writing Program

5 October, Monday
Hanif Abdurraqib * Marie Mutsuki Mockett * Nishat Ahmed and Joanna Eleftheriou * Maggie Smith

6 October, Tuesday
Grace Talusan * Daniel Mueller * Marcel0 Hernandez Castillo

7 October, Wednesday 
Jake Skeets * Rebecca Bengal and Luisa A. Igloria * Kishi Bashi in "Omoiyari:" A Musical Conversation 

8 October, Thursday
Suzanne Strempek Shea * Aimee Nezhukumatahil

If you are in Hampton Roads, you can purchase these writers' books at the ODU Bookstore on Monarch Way.




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Maps for Migrants and Ghosts

9/15/2020

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June 1990 ~ My first published book, Cordillera Tales, Retold and Illusrated (in the picture above); I was all of 28, a very young instructor at the University of the Philippines in Baguio. Seven years prior, even younger (and a new mother to boot) I'd entered poems for the first time to the Palanca Literary Awards in the Philippines. To my great shock my entry won first prize. When Cordillera Tales came out, I wasn't even sure what "page proofs" or "royalty" meant.

September 18, 2020 ~ My newest book, Maps for Migrants and Ghosts, is scheduled for release from Southern Illinois University Press. Each book, and every book in between these 2, has been a leaving and a returning: to find and lose and find the self again. 

In this strange pandemic time that we inhabit, as forests burn and deltas flood and winter comes to places that never knew it before, we count our daily dead, grieve everyone and everything that has passed too soon, and keep close what's most important (family, friends, community). It's heartbreaking work, this living we must do. And yet we do it, for all we love and hold sacred in the world.

I haven't given a thought to any book launches or readings yet, other than the one in a program shared with the brilliant Rebecca Bengal for the 43rd ODU (Virtual) Literary Festival (Wednesday 7 October at 4:00 PM EST).

But I hope you'll show this book some love—whether it's through personal purchase or through course adoption. Please try to purchase directly from SIU Press so as to keep low the number of books that might get remaindered. (And did you know? For poetry books, writers start earning 5% royalty only after a thousand copies have been sold). 

And I look forward to the time, hopefully sooner rather than later, when we can all convene again in person and in the same space to laugh, hug, read and share poems, 
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The Labor of "Others"

9/6/2020

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(Labor Day 2020) 

In his State of the Union address in January 1941, after his second re-election and with the country on the brink of the second world war, Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke of “The Four Freedoms:” Freedom of Expression, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear. He extolled these as the underpinnings of the ideals of democracy, as values and aspirations worth fighting for; and how America had a mandate to propagate these through the world--

“We look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms. …The first is freedom of speech and expression—everywhere in the world. The second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way—everywhere in the world. The third is freedom from want, which, translated into world terms, means economic understandings which will secure to every nation a healthy peacetime life for its inhabitants—everywhere in the world. The fourth is freedom from fear, which, translated into world terms, means a world-wide reduction of armaments to such a point and in such a thorough fashion that no nation will be in a position to commit an act of physical aggression against any neighbor—anywhere in the world.”

American painter Norman Rockwell created a series of paintings in spring of that year, inspired by Roosevelt’s speech.  The Saturday Evening Post ran a special issue on “The Four Freedoms” in 1943, commissioning 4 writers to craft essays that would run alongside Norman Rockwell’s paintings: Booth Tarkington on “Freedom of Speech,” Will Durant on “Freedom of Worship,” Stephen Vincent Benet on “Freedom from Fear,” and Filipino American labor activist, writer, novelist and poet Carlos Bulosan on “Freedom from Want.”

Rockwell’s now iconic painting that goes with Bulosan’s essay depicts a white family gathered around the Thanksgiving table. The patriarch beams as his wife lowers a roasted turkey on to the table covered by a pristine white cloth and laid with fine china— it is large enough to feed all of them there, plus perhaps a dozen more people. In the foreground, a bowl overflowing with fruit speaks of abundance and even excess. Soon they will say grace, giving thanks for the gifts with which the American capitalist economy supposedly rewards those who are willing to work hard and sacrifice. 

Nothing in the scene hints at the dark years of the Great Depression little more than a decade before. There was the stock market crash of 1929; millions of workers lost their jobs while corporations continued to profit. Long lines at soup kitchens and food banks included middle class citizens, even as one percent of the richest Americans could boast of owning over a third of all national assets. All of this sounds eerily familiar in our own present time.     

Bulosan, a farm worker, labor activist, and immigrant, also spoke about how in his time as in ours, much of the work that goes into the American economy and translates as food on our tables is from labor of immigrant hands and bodies. 

In 2019, 28.4 million foreign born or immigrant workers made up almost 18% of the entire American labor force. In Virginia alone, one in six workers is an immigrant, making up 17% of the state’s labor force in 2018.  Immigrant workers in the state are in numerous fields and industries: in professional, scientific, and technology services; in health care; in construction and food services; in entrepreneurship, sales and retail, transportation, warehousing, among others.   

Often maligned as lazy, weak-minded, or slow, immigrant workers in the US are described by the US Census Bureau as having the highest participation in the labor force than American-born workers.  

Bulosan wrote in his 1943 Freedom from Want Essay: 

“So long as the fruit of our labor is denied us, so long will want manifest itself in a world of slaves. It is only when we have plenty to eat — plenty of everything — that we begin to understand what freedom means. To us, freedom is not an intangible thing. When we have enough to eat, then we are healthy enough to enjoy what we eat. Then we have the time and ability to read and think and discuss things. Then we are not merely living but also becoming a creative part of life. It is only then that we become a growing part of democracy.

We do not take democracy for granted. We feel it grow in our working together — many millions of us working toward a common purpose. If it took us several decades of sacrifices to arrive at this faith, it is because it took us that long to know what part of America is ours.

Our faith has been shaken many times, and now it is put to question. Our faith is a living thing, and it can be crippled or chained. It can be killed by denying us enough food or clothing, by blasting away our personalities and keeping us in constant fear. Unless we are properly prepared, the powers of darkness will have good reason to catch us unaware and trample our lives.
…
We have moved down the years steadily toward the practice of democracy. We become animate in the growth of Kansas wheat or in the ring of Mississippi rain. We tremble in the strong winds of the Great Lakes. We cut timbers in Oregon just as the wild flowers blossom in Maine. We are multitudes in Pennsylvania mines, in Alaskan canneries. We are millions from Puget Sound to Florida. In violent factories, crowded tenements, teeming cities. Our numbers increase as the war revolves into years and increases hunger, disease, death, and fear.

But sometimes we wonder if we are really a part of America. We recognize the mainsprings of American democracy in our right to form unions and bargain through them collectively, our opportunity to sell our products at reasonable prices, and the privilege of our children to attend schools where they learn the truth about the world in which they live. We also recognize the forces which have been trying to falsify American history — the forces which drive many Americans to a corner of compromise with those who would distort the ideals of men that died for freedom.

Sometimes we walk across the land looking for something to hold on to. We cannot believe that the resources of this country are exhausted. Even when we see our children suffer humiliations, we cannot believe that America has no more place for us. We realize that what is wrong is not in our system of government, but in the ideals which were blasted away by a materialistic age….”


You see immigrant workers driving cabs, in construction lots, in the kitchens of restaurants, cleaning hallways in our schools and clinics, taking care of patients in nursing homes and hospitals, teaching our children in schools, loading cargo into freight cars, moving through orchards and vegetable farms to pick the fruit and produce for our tables. As they acquire more language skills and become more acculturated, immigrant workers move into jobs that require higher education or skills. Economists predict that as the nation’s workforce needs grow and change, restrictive immigration policies will be detrimental to the economy instead of encouraging its growth:

“The research cited … shows that, as important as immigrants are to today’s workforce, about one third of current immigrant workers are not authorized to work in the U.S. Our ability to meet America’s future workforce needs will depend, in no small part, on ensuring the U.S. has sound immigration policies that meet the economic needs of our nation.”  

Bulosan’s essay speaks to us about how we still need to work toward freedom from want—especially as long as there are "others" who continue to feel that they do not “share the promise and fruits of American life.”

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    ~ Teju Cole

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  • BIO
  • WORK
    • BOOKS + CHAPBOOKS
    • SELECTED POEMS & FEATURES
    • VIDEOPOEMS
    • SELECTED ESSAYS
    • VA Poet Laureate Projects 2020-22 >
      • YOUNG POETS IN THE COMMUNITY
      • POETRY POSTCARD PROJECT
      • WE ARE HERE
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