U.S. Poet
Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera: 'The audience is half of the poem' - LA Times
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A son of migrant farm workers in California, Juan Felipe
Herrera will be the next U.S. poet in chief.
The Library of Congress
announced Wednesday the appointment of Herrera as the nation's 21st poet
laureate for 2015 through 2016, beginning in September. Herrera, 66, whose
parents emigrated from Mexico, will be the nation's first Latino poet laureate
since the position was created in 1936.
Librarian of Congress
James Billington said he sees in Herrera's poems the work of an American
original.
"His poems engage in
a serious sense of play — in language and in image — that I feel gives them
enduring power," Billington said in a written statement. "I see how
they champion voices, traditions and histories, as well as a cultural
perspective, which is a vital part of our larger American identity."
AP report continues:
Some of the works Herrera
said he most enjoyed writing were captured in "Half the World in
Light," a book of poems lauded for his experimentation and for documenting
his Chicano experience in America.
Herrera was born in 1948
in Fowler, California. His family of migrant workers moved often, at times living
in tents and trailers along roads. His father learned English by paying fellow
workers pennies to teach him each new word.
Herrera said he is
humbled and overwhelmed to be named U.S. poet laureate and to be the first of
Latino descent.
The laureate position
involves crafting poetry projects and broadening the audience for poetry. The
2013-2014 poet laureate, Natasha Trethewey, launched a series of reports from
locations nationwide for a "PBS NewsHour" poetry series to explore
societal issues.
For his term, Herrera is
envisioning a program with the Library of Congress that he calls Casa de
Colores — House of Colors — to include people of every color and cultural
background. He may host voice ensembles with young people to engage with
poetry, perhaps taking a poem by Walt Whitman and then having a group write a
poem together to perform in spoken word or with music. Or perhaps the public
could contribute to a national writing project by making submissions online.
"Yes, I am the first
Latino poet laureate in the United States. But I'm also here for everyone and
from everyone. My voice is made by everyone's voices," Herrera said.
At the same time, he
said, he also wants to encourage more young Latino students to write and read
and benefit from the Library of Congress' resources.
"You know, we speak
about understanding each other, having those conversations nationwide —
culturally, historically — and yet there's a lot of gaps," he said.
"So I want to assist with closing the gap of knowing about and hearing
about our Latino communities in terms of literature, in terms of writing.
"And I want our
young Latinos and Latinas to write their hearts out and express their hearts
out and let us all listen to each other."
Herrera grew up speaking
Spanish in his early years and became ashamed to speak at school, so he shut
down, he said. But he eventually found his voice through joining choirs in
middle school and high school.
Herrera eventually
graduated from UCLA, earned graduate degrees at Stanford and the University of
Iowa Writer's Workshop, and built a career in teaching.
From 2012 to 2015,
Herrera served as poet laureate of California. In March, he retired from
teaching creative writing at the University of California, Riverside and is now
a visiting professor in ethnic studies at the University of Washington.
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