Publisher's Synopsis
In homage to Gloria Anzaldúa and her iconic work Borderlands/La Frontera, award-winning poets ire'ne lara silva and Dan Vera have assembled the work of 54 writers who reflect on the complex terrain-the deeply felt psychic, social, and geopolitical borderlands-that Anzaldúa inhabited, theorized, explored, and invented.
Named for the Nahuatl word meaning "their soul," Imaniman: Poets Writing in the Anzaldúan Borderlands presents work that is sparked from the soul: the individual soul, the communal soul. These poets interrogate, complicate, and personalize the borderlands in transgressive and transformative ways, opening new paths and revisioning old ones for the next generation of spiritual, political, and cultural border crossers.
"Within shifting borders-it is good to enter into these voice worlds-to stand, bow & listen in their presence. Peoples, familias, cities, towns, rancherìas and the wilderness of all border-crossers & messengers of border spaces open in these pages." -From the Introduction by Juan Felipe Herrera, US Poet Laureate
Contributors include: Juan Felipe Herrera, Rodney Gomez, Daniel E. Solìs y Martìnez, Carmen Calatayud, ire'ne lara silva, Tara Betts, José Antonio Rodrìguez, David Hatfield Sparks, Barbara Jane Reyes, Miguel M. Morales, Cecca Austin Ochoa, Cordelia Barrera, Oswaldo Vargas, Emmy Pérez, Dan Vera, Michael Wasson, Melanie Márquez Adams, Tomas Moniz, Gabriela Ramirez-Chavez, D.M. Chávez, Inés Hernández-Avila, Nidia Melissa Bautista, Nadine Saliba, Monica Palacios, Jennine DOC Wright, César L. De León, Nia Witherspoon, Joe Jiménez, Roy G. Guzmán, Veronica Sandoval, Juan Morales, Victor Payan, Abigail Carl-Klassen, Sarah A. Chavez, Rachel McKibbens, jo reyes-boitel, Adela Najarro, Elsie Rivas Gómez, Lupe Mendez, T. Sarmina, Shauna Osborn, Marie Varghese, Allen Baros, Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Ysabel Y. González, Minal Hajratwala, Karla Cordero, Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo, Pablo Miguel Martìnez, Barbara Brinson Curiel, Olga Garcìa Echeverrìa, Suzy de Jesus Huerta, David Bowles, John Fry, Kim Shuck