Poesída:
Poetry and the New Activism of HIV/AIDS
J. Elizabeth
Clark
City
University of New York
LaGuardia
Community College
The
powerful have been practicing saying out loud, if only briefly, those
unmentionable people who are then otherwise ignored and remain
oppressed, people who live what seem unimaginable lives: the drug addict
we look away from as we pass her in the street, the son who has been
disowned and kicked out of his home by his parents, the crack baby
abandoned quivering in the incubator.
We have said, with our newfangled antiretroviral vocabulary, that
AIDS belongs to another people.
Gay, North-American literary production of the 1980s and 1990s was
marked by a profound engagement with the poetry of AIDS. The same
virus that gave way to such local, regional, national and international
activism also shaped a new literary motif—literature grappling with the
virus and its meaning for individuals and a larger society. Seminal
North American works such as Paul Monette’s West of Yesterday East
of Summer and Love Alone: 18 Elegies for Rog, Mark Doty’s My
Alexandria and Thom Gunn’s The Man With Night Sweats achingly portrayed
the devastating effects on the gay community in the United States.
Their work became the standard by which other AIDS poetry was judged, but
while important, their work also created a portrait of AIDS as a largely
white, privileged, North American gay experience.
Amid this prolific writing, the Latino and Latin American experience
remained largely invisible in the United States. Critics and poets
alike have speculated on the roles of racism, homophobia, machismo and
Catholicism as leading factors in hindering the formation of a gay, Latino
identity. In the mid-1990s, however, a marked change in literary
production saw the publication of a number of new works by Latino and
Latin American authors, adding the poesía panlatina to the body of AIDS
literature, complicating our ideas about sexuality and desire. This
paper, which borrows part of its title Poesída, from the anthology of
AIDS poetry compiled by Carlos A. Rodríguez Matos, will examine the
poetry of several North-American Latino poets featured in the Poesída
anthology: Rafael Campo, Miguel Algarín, Gil Cuadros and Ramón
García and Latin American and Caribbean poets Francisco Casas, and
Laureano Albán, seeking connections between their social and political
elegiac presentations of SIDA in poetry. This paper will also argue
that against the powerful cultural, social, political and religious
currents that have defined what HIV/AIDS means, poesída panlatina has
provided a critical outlet as a new form of activism.
I am an
Associate Professor of English at the City University of New York—
LaGuardia
Community College
campus where I teach composition, Cultural Studies of Medicine, poetry
and creative writing. I
have published interviews with Tory Dent and Rachel Hadas in the
minnesota
review. My essay
“(In/Out)side AIDS Activism: Searching
for a Critically Engaged Politics,” appears in the Journal
of Medical Humanities (2004) and a chapter of this manuscript,
“Defining Post-Protease AIDS Literature” has been accepted for Chris
Bell’s collection, Remember
AIDS?.
I have also presented on AIDS poetry at conferences such as
the Northeastern Modern Language Association and the
Valdosta
State
’s Women’s Studies Conference.
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