Friday, October 11, 2024

Festival Nacional del Libro 2024 (1). Escritores de origen latino: Marie Arana

En pocas palabras: Javier J. Jaspe 

Washington D.C.

The 2024 National Book Festival was held in the nation’s capital at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center on Saturday, August 24, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Several programs were livestreamed, and video of all talks can be viewed online after the Festival’s conclusion.

EN: https://www.loc.gov/events/2024-national-book-festival/

Una lista completa de los autores que participaron en el Festival  Nacional del Libro de 2024 (FNL2024) puede verse

EN: https://www.loc.gov/events/2024-national-book-festival/authors/

La serie que iniciamos hoy se refiere a escritores de origen latino que participaron en el FNL2024. Su objeto no consiste en realizar un análisis de su obra, sino el de publicar material encontrado en Internet relacionado con la misma y sus autores. Los textos de Internet se transcribirán en itálicas, en español o inglés, según sea el caso, con indicación de su fuente. Esta primera entrega se refiere a Marie Arana. Veamos:

Marie Arana:

Marie Arana is a prizewinning author and literary critic and former literary director of the Library of Congress. Among her numerous books are the National Book Award finalist “American Chica”; the novels “Cellophane” and “Lima Nights”; the biography “Bolívar: American Liberator” (winner of The Los Angeles Times Book Prize); and a sweeping history of Latin America, “Silver, Sword and Stone.” Winner of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award for Literature in 2020, Arana has been an executive at two major publishing houses, a judge for the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, a Latin America columnist for The New York Times, a television commentator on books and publishing and editor-in-chief of Book World at The Washington Post. Her new book, “LatinoLand: A Portrait of America's Largest and Least Understood Minority,” is featured at the 2024 National Book Festival.

EN: https://www.loc.gov/events/2024-national-book-festival/authors/item/n00027341/marie-arana/

Selected Works at the Library of Congress

EN: https://www.loc.gov/search/?all=true&sb=date_desc&uf=contributor:arana,%20marie

Entrevista en el FNL2024:

America's Largest and Least Understood Minority: Marie Arana on "LatinoLand"

Journalist and writer Marie Arana has taken on a nearly impossible task in “LatinoLand”: write an overview of Latino America. Latino Americans make up nearly 20% of the American population but they are not a monolith or a single group. Join us as Arana talks about her work interviewing and depicting Latino Americans, in conversation with María Peña.

Video EN:  https://www.loc.gov/item/webcast-11475/

Website de la autora:

https://mariearana.net/

Ensayo de Jonathan Yardley sobre Marie Arana en el Website de la autora:

EN: https://mariearana.net/ensayo-de-jonathan-yardley-sobre-marie-arana/

Marie Arana es una auténtica ciudadana hemisférica. Su escritura explora y abraza los dos lados de las Américas, tal como ella misma lo ha hecho durante toda su vida. Nacida en Lima, de padre peruano y madre “yankee”, se siente igualmente a gusto en ambas culturas. Tiene la doble nacionalidad de Perú y Estados Unidos, posee residencias en ambos países, y es apasionadamente leal a ambos. En los últimos años, mientras la presencia latina en Estados Unidos se ha vuelto cada vez más grande e importante, Marie ha trabajado incansablemente para explicar cada cultura a la otra.

Ella ha hecho del biculturalismo y todas sus ramificaciones los temas centrales de su escritura. Hasta la fecha su tema principal ha sido América Latina en general, específicamente Perú, y ha escrito  relativamente poco acerca de Estados Unidos, acerca de una serie de pasajes de sus premiadas memorias “American Chica: Two Worlds, one Childhood” (Chica Americana: Dos Mundos, Una Infancia). Sin embargo, Estados Unidos es absolutamente fundamental para su trabajo, porque ella escribe únicamente en inglés. Por lo tanto, su creación es por naturaleza propia bicultural e intercultural, teniendo muchos de los temas que exploraron los grandes escritores del “boom” latinoamericano –Gabriel García Márquez, Carlos Fuentes, Julio Cortázar, Mario Vargas Llosa- pero en inglés y desde un punto de vista que es en tando de América del Norte como del Sur.

Arana simpatiza con la vanguardia literaria, de Vladimir Nabokiov (uno de sus escritores favoritos) a Roberto Bolaño, pero a pesar de que su prosa es a menudo muy inventiva, no practica los juegos de palabras. Su prosa refleja su profundo interés y conocimiento de la linguistica (área en la que tiene un Máster) y los idiomas. Habla con fluidez español, inglés y francés, se especializó en ruso en la Universidad Northwestern y todavía lo lee y lo habla con facilidad, y tiene italiano y chino mandarin “de calle”. Aunque hablaba inglés desde pequeña, gracias a su madre, creció inmersa en el ambiente de habla española de Lima y los otros parajes donde vivía su familia en Perú, lo que hace aún más notable que el inglés sea ahora su lengua primaria y lo escriba con una fluidez notable.

Aparte de Nabokov y las plumas ya mencionadas del “boom”, los escritores que más admira son Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Jorge Luis Borges, Vladimir Voinovich (cuya obra editó en 1980 mientras trabajaba en Harcourt Brace Jovanovich), Flannery O’Connor, Joseph Conrad, León Tolstói, Stanley Elkin (cuya obra editó en Simon & Schuster), y Jane Austen. Un número de críticos etiquetó su novela “Cellophane” (Celofán) como realismo mágico, y aunque Marie estaba halagada de ser comparada con García Márquez, rechaza el término en sí mismo. Su trabajo, como el de los maestros latinoamericanos, se basa en la realidad cotidiana de la vida de los latinos, que incluye conexiones con lo espiritual y el otro mundo, que no son “mágicas” a los ojos de quienes las experimentan, sino simplemente la vida misma.

La prosa de Arana puede ser lírica, como en “American Chica: Two Worlds, One Childhood” (Chica Americana: Dos Mundos, Una Infancia) y, sobre todo, “Cellophane” (Celofán), pero es igualmente capaz de escribir en un estilo magro muscular, como en su novela “Lima Nights” (Noches Limeñas) o en las muchas piezas de periodismo que ha hecho desde que llegó a The Washington Post en 1993. Su estilo de escritura no se deriva solamente de su formación linguistica y la lectura a profundidad, sino de su apasionado amor por la música. Es una consumada pianista. Un piano de cola Steinway, que desearía tener más tiempo para tocar, es la pieza central de su sala de estar en Washington. Sus gustos musicales corren, literalmente, desde Mozart a Motown. De niña estudió ballet con Alexandra Danilova, mientras soñaba con ser una cantante de ópera. Le gusta Bach, Mendelssohn, Chopin y Rachmaninov, pero también Neil Young, Joe Cocker, Marvin Gaye y Santana.

Además de la música, sus actividades favoritas giran en torno a la mesa y su familia. Es una cocinera consumada e innovadora, cuya especialidad es la comida peruana, que en los últimos años amantes de la gastronomía de todo el mundo han llegado a considerar como una de las mejores del planeta. Cocina peruano si está en Washington o en Lima, pero prefiere este último porque los ingredientes esenciales –papas, limones, mariscos, Pisco- son nativos y frescos. Cuando están en Lima, ella y su marido son visitantes frecuentes de los increíbles restaurantes de la ciudad, siempre comenzando el almuerzo con un perfecto Pisco Sour.

Marie tiene dos hijos adultos: Adam, que trabaja como ingeniero director de software en Silicon Valley, y Lalo, que vive en Londres. Sus nietos, Aidan, Ryder y Max, representan un sinfín de alegrías para Arana, aunque quien la ve no puede creer que sea abuela.

Jonathan Yardley

Washington D.C.

Junio 2010      

BIOGRAPHIES

Pen/Faulkner

EN: https://www.penfaulkner.org/2020/10/30/marie-arana/

Marie Arana (she/her) is the Literary Director of the Library of Congress. She was born in Peru, moved to the United States at the age of 9, and began her career in book publishing, where she became Vice President and Senior Editor at Harcourt Brace as well as Simon & Schuster publishers. In 1993, she joined The Washington Post as Deputy Editor of Book World and became Editor in Chief a few years later—a position she held for ten years. From 2010 to 2019, she was a Writer at Large for The Washington Post and a Senior Advisor to the U.S. Librarian of Congress. Arana is the author of six books, among them her memoir American Chica, which was a finalist for the 2001 National Book Award and winner of Books for a Better Life; The Writing Life, a collection of essays about how writers live and work; and two highly acclaimed novels Cellophane and Lima Nights. Her biography of Simón Bolívar (Bolívar: American Liberator) was awarded the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in 2014. Her history of Latin America, Silver, Sword, and Stone, was named best nonfiction book of the year by the American Library Association. Arana has been the director of the National Book Festival and director of John F. Kennedy Center’s literary programs for many years and has chaired juries for the Pulitzer Prize as well as the National Book Award. Her commentary has been published in The New York Times, National Geographic, USA Today, Washington Post, El País, El Comercio, El Tiempo, and many other publications throughout the Americas and Europe.

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AS/COA

EN: https://www.as-coa.org/speakers/marie-arana

Marie Arana

Biographer, Essayist, and Novelist

Marie Arana was born in Lima, Peru, the daughter of a Peruvian father and an American mother. She is the author of the critically praised memoir American Chica, which was a finalist for a National Book Award and the PEN-Memoir Award, and the winner of a Books for a Better Life Award. She is also the author of two novels, Cellophane and Lima Nights, as well as The Writing Life, a collection from her well-known column for The Washington Post. Her commentary has been published in The Washington PostUSA TodayThe New York TimesThe International Herald TribuneThe WeekCivilizationSmithsonianNational Geographic, and numerous other publications. Currently, she is a writer-at-large for The Washington Post Book World and a senior advisor to the Librarian of Congress. She began her career in book publishing, becoming Vice President and Senior Editor at both Harcourt Brace and Simon & Schuster publishers, and eventually serving as editor-in-chief of The Washington Post Book World for many years. Arana has served on the boards of directors of the National Book Critics Circle and the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. She has directed literary events for the AmericArtes Festival at the Kennedy Center and the Library of Congress’s National Book Festival. Ms. Arana holds a BA in Russian Language and Literature from Northwestern University, an MA in Linguistics and Sociolinguistics from Hong Kong University, and a certificate of scholarship (Mandarin language) from Yale University in China. She has been a judge for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award as well as for the National Book Critics Circle. She lives in Washington, D.C., and Lima, Peru, with her husband, the literary critic Jonathan Yardley.

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Wikipedia

EN: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Arana

 

Reportajes/Entrevistas

 

Bookend: Marie Arana On Bringing Latin America To Life

By Jonathan Wilson

Listen: https://wamu.org/story/13/05/31/bookend_marie_arana_on_bringing_latin_america_to_life/

May 31, 2013

Marie Arana is the former editor-in-chief of the Washington Post Book World, and is a literary fixture in the D.C. region. During her 17 years at the Post, Arana shaped the city’s bookworm tendencies. She has also helped plan literary events for the Kennedy Center, organized the National Book Festival, and written a memoir and a couple of novels of her own. Her latest work is a biography of the Venezuelan military and political leader, Simón Bolívar. Jonathan Wilson sat down with Arana on the sixth floor of the Madison Building at the Library of Congress, where she currently serves as a Distinguished Scholar.

Excerpts from the interview:

On her work:

“It’s true, all my books have been very different. But I tell people, in fact, they’re all part of the same ‘building’ in a sense. I’ve been trying to build a building in which I explain to American readers who Latin Americans are, how we think, how our history has been so different. Even the novels, which are based on my family, the memoir also, which was based on my childhood, and now, this biography of a quintessential Latin American hero; it all is of a piece, even though it doesn’t look that way.”

On power:

“You begin to think about power and how people get it and how people lose it when you live in Washington, D.C. And certainly, Bolivar’s story is about gaining power out of nowhere, and then losing it, drastically. It was probably very colored by the fact that I was sitting in Washington, D.C.”

On working:

“I’m lucky to have worked at a newspaper because the sense of deadline is always there. I can’t afford to suffer the blank page syndrome. Something has got to go down. So what I do is I do my best writing when the sun goes down. I wish it weren’t that way, because I end up, you know, at 4 in the morning, still writing. But that’s when I’m most creative, at night, when everything’s quiet and I’ve got a room to myself and no phones are ringing.”

On writing:

“When I’m writing, at first, I feel like it’s disastrous. I feel like I’m not getting what I want down, but I do it anyway. I put it down, and it’s a muddy mess — the next morning when I get up, and I slap it around, it gets better.”

[Music: “Frost Bit” by Mello Music Group from Odd Seasons / “Our Lips Are Sealed” by Twilight Trio from Pure Instrumental: Pop It, Vol. 7]

AUDIO EXTRA: Arana reading her account of how one of Bolivar’s mistresses, Manuela Sainz, saved him from assassination in Bogota, Colombia.

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Inside the South American Heart: Marie Arana’s “Bolivar: American Liberator”

The former Post Book World editor talks about her vivid portrait of South American revolutionary Simon Bolívar.

Written by John Wilwol

Published on April 9, 2013

EN: https://www.washingtonian.com/2013/04/09/inside-the-south-american-heart-marie-aranas-bolivar-american-liberator/

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BookPage

LatinoLand By Marie Arana

Review by Alejandro Ramirez

EN: https://www.bookpage.com/reviews/latinoland-marie-arana-book-review/

Reporter Marie Arana paintes a thoughtful portrait of how Latinos have shaped—and been shaped by---the United States in this punchy cultural history

The Latino community doesn’t exist as a monolith. Latin Americans hail from over 20 countries, each with its own unique ethnicity and culture. African, Spanish and Indigenous influences vary wildly but are consistently present in most groups. Labels like Hispanic or Latino don’t snugly fit this growing population, and some people shrug them off entirely.

Lauded author and Washington Post columnist Marie Arana admits early on in LatinoLand: A Portrait of America’s Largest and Least Understood Minority that she is “working with a deficit” in her attempt to capture the diverse experience of American Latinos. Yet by embracing the variety of this diaspora—and its people’s conflicting views on race, religion and politics—she comes as close to success as one can get.

The book at first functions as a survey, with brief chapters on Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans and other Latino groups. While these historical accounts might not unearth anything unknown to Latin American scholars, Arana’s punchy writing style is engaging, informative and full of pleasant surprises, like her tale about the first Dominican to settle New York in the 1500s, centuries before a bodega opened in Washington Heights. 

Arana also tackles the plurality of Latino identities from other angles, including the morphing religious affiliations of Hispanic Americans and a thoughtful dismantling of the myth of the “Latino vote.” Short profiles contextualize the broader themes and history lessons; some of the stories related here are harrowing, some amusing, others mundane. The horrors of colonialism, segregation and genocide are everpresent.

LatinoLand features interviews with an impressive swath of Latinos, from undocumented custodians and emboldened activists to federal policymakers and religious leaders—though at times there does seem to be a reliance on higher-educated professionals. While Arana celebrates the diversity of American Latinos and doesn’t push for any kind of assimilation, she also appeals to traditional American values when making the case for Latino acceptance, pointing to their contributions to business, academia and the military. But her most salient argument is that Latinos have contributed so much more to this country than what’s acknowledged in the mainstream; by spotlighting unsung heroes like climate scientist Mario Molina and labor champion Dolores Huerta, she gives them their due. 

As Arana pieces together a vibrant collage of American Latino lives, she communicates her belief that solidarity is possible among this fractured cohort. Perhaps, one thinks, it can emerge from the shared experience of being underestimated and undervalued.

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Foreign Affairs

LatinoLand: A Portrait of America’s Largest and Least Understood Minority

By Marie Arana

Simon & Schuster, 2024, 576 pp.

Reviewed by Richard Feinberg

Published on August 20, 2024

EN: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/reviews/latinoland-portrait-americas-largest-and-least-understood-minority

LatinoLand is a sweeping, celebratory history of the diverse Latino contributions to American life. Arana begins with a terrifyingly bleak assessment of the genocidal racism of the early Spanish conquistadors and the biased colorism that continues to plague the Western Hemisphere. But as the captivating narrative progresses, it pivots to a festive, impressionistic appreciation of Latino success stories across professions, even if in the United States, in the author’s view, Latinos too often remain underrepresented. At the core of the book are the complex tensions between the imperatives of assimilation and maintaining one’s cultural identity—epitomized by Arana’s own deep loyalties toward both her motherland, Peru, and her adopted home, the United States. Arana struggles to extract distinctive, enduring Latino traits from the vast multiplicity of Latino national, ethnic, and class backgrounds beyond the commonplace values of “family, work, and joy.” As the over 200 interviews reported in the book faithfully document, the Catholic Church and the Democratic Party no longer bind Latinos together, and many third-generation Latinos are no longer fluent in Spanish.

VIDEOS

Marie Arana | Latinoland: A Portrait of America’s Largest and Least Understood Minority

EN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHtvMPVHkA4

115: A Nation with No Name… with “LatinoLand” Author & Acclaimed Journalist Marie Arana

EN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SO7ucRWNnhs

Writing Latino History - Marie Arana & Juan Martinez

EN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NI3tjcgi0AQ

Marie Arana, "LatinoLand" (Book TV)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDN5bAsWxgc&t=15s

Marie’s TED Talk on Bolivar

EN: https://mariearana.net/maries-ted-talk-on-bolivar/

También EN:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reFr06PGB3c

2024 Inter-American Dialogue Leadership Award

EN: https://www.thedialogue.org/press-and-media/releases/marie-arana-to-receive-prestigious-inter-american-dialogue-leadership-award/

Marie Arana to receive prestigious Inter-American Dialogue Leadership Award

Washington, DC – Marie Arana, Peruvian American author, critic, and journalist will receive the Distinguished Leadership for the Americas Award for Contributions to Literature and Inter-American Understanding at the IX Annual Leadership for the Americas Awards Gala on October 1, 2024, at the Organization of American States (OAS). Awards are presented each year to individuals or organizations committed to the Dialogue’s mission of advancing democratic governance, shared prosperity, and social equity in the Western Hemisphere. This annual event brings together diverse leaders from across the Americas whose exceptional contributions have been instrumental in addressing the most pressing challenges facing the region. 

Arana is the award-winning author of LatinoLand: A Portrait of America’s Largest and Least Understood Minority, American Chica (finalist in 2001 for the National Book Award), Silver, Sword, and Stone (winner of the 2019 American Library Association best nonfiction book), and Bolivar: American Liberator (winner of the 2013 Los Angeles Times Book Prize). Arana has held prominent positions in the literary world, including executive roles at Harcourt Brace and Simon & Schuster publishing houses, a judge for both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, and editor in chief of Book World at The Washington Post. She served as the inaugural Literary Director of the Library of Congress and has recently appeared on the PBS program History with David Rubenstein. Her writing focusing on the Americas and the Latino experience in the US is also featured in The Washington Post and The New York Times. 

“Arana’s work explores the historical themes that characterize and connect the Americas while intertwining them with her life story. Her books provide in-depth analyses of the cultural, political, and economic forces shaping the region, while exploring the nuanced experiences of Latino communities in the United States,” said Inter-American Dialogue President and CEO, Dr. Rebecca Bill Chavez

Previous honorees include, Djamila Ribeiro, Coordinator of the Plural Feminisms Institute, Pierpaolo Barbieri, CEO and Founder of Ualá & Executive Director of Greenmantle, Juan Manuel Santos, Nobel Laureate and former President of Colombia and Luiza Trajano, Chairwoman of Magazine Luiza & Chair of Grupo Mulheres do Brasil.

 

 

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deas para salvar la democracia (también en América Latina), por Enrique Gomáriz Moraga

 EN:  https://talcualdigital.com/ideas-para-salvar-la-democracia-tambien-en-america-latina-por-enrique-gomariz-moraga/