Ragged and raging across the spectrums of cognition, race, and gender, Tarta Americana lyrically envisions forms of survival outside neuronormative perceptions and histories. Against the recent tide of white nationalism in the United States, Tarta Americana finds a rhinestone in Ritchie Valens, the rock and roll legend, surfacing across time and bodies, genders and sounds, displacing the linear unfolding of desire and biography. Valens, the embodiment of corporeal transcendence, guides Martinez as he expresses his own neurodiversity, his struggles and triumphs, interrogating memory, gender, and race, traversing pain in search of compassion and joy. Tarta Americana, tarred and glittering, melodic in its screams, overdrives text and space in chase of American politics that could, at last, harmonize love with redemption.
A suite of poems that channels the legendary singer-songwriter Ritchie Valens to examine and question mid-twentieth-century conceptions of race and art, identity and desire
Ragged and raging across the spectrums of cognition, race, and gender, Tarta Americana lyrically envisions forms of survival outside neuronormative perceptions and histories. Against the recent tide of white nationalism in the United States, Tarta Americana finds a rhinestone in Ritchie Valens, the rock and roll legend, surfacing across time and bodies, genders and sounds, displacing the linear unfolding of desire and biography. Valens, the embodiment of corporeal transcendence, guides Martinez as he expresses his own neurodiversity, his struggles and triumphs, interrogating memory, gender, and race, traversing pain in search of compassion and joy. Tarta Americana, tarred and glittering, melodic in its screams, overdrives text and space in chase of American politics that could, at last, harmonize love with redemption.
Ragged and raging across the spectrums of cognition, race, and gender, Tarta Americana lyrically envisions forms of survival outside neuronormative perceptions and histories. Against the recent tide of white nationalism in the United States, Tarta Americana finds a rhinestone in Ritchie Valens, the rock and roll legend, surfacing across time and bodies, genders and sounds, displacing the linear unfolding of desire and biography. Valens, the embodiment of corporeal transcendence, guides Martinez as he expresses his own neurodiversity, his struggles and triumphs, interrogating memory, gender, and race, traversing pain in search of compassion and joy. Tarta Americana, tarred and glittering, melodic in its screams, overdrives text and space in chase of American politics that could, at last, harmonize love with redemption.
A suite of poems that channels the legendary singer-songwriter Ritchie Valens to examine and question mid-twentieth-century conceptions of race and art, identity and desire
Ragged and raging across the spectrums of cognition, race, and gender, Tarta Americana lyrically envisions forms of survival outside neuronormative perceptions and histories. Against the recent tide of white nationalism in the United States, Tarta Americana finds a rhinestone in Ritchie Valens, the rock and roll legend, surfacing across time and bodies, genders and sounds, displacing the linear unfolding of desire and biography. Valens, the embodiment of corporeal transcendence, guides Martinez as he expresses his own neurodiversity, his struggles and triumphs, interrogating memory, gender, and race, traversing pain in search of compassion and joy. Tarta Americana, tarred and glittering, melodic in its screams, overdrives text and space in chase of American politics that could, at last, harmonize love with redemption.
J. Michael Martinez is the author of three collections of poetry, including Heredities, which received the Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets, and Museum of the Americas, which was a winner of the National Poetry Series Competition and long-listed for the 2018 National Book Award in Poetry. He is an assistant professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at San Jose State University.
Advance praise for Tarta Americana:
“Martinez’s latest collection uses the figure of Ritchie Valens,
the legendary Mexican-American recording artist, to unspool a
knotted personal history, including chemical and erotic utopias and
dystopias and the journey to writing about, from, and within
neurodiversity . . . Those remediations are intimately
expansive genealogies of a personal and collective wound but they
are also explorations of neurodivergent form, understood as
animated by radically synaesthetic ways of knowing.”
—Intervenxions, The Latinx Project at New York University
“A playfully kaleidoscopic collection that focuses on Ritchie
Valens, the Chicano rock legend of the 1950s . . .
Another superlative entry in this poet's record.” —Booklist
(Starred Review)
“J. Michael Martinez’s expanding oeuvre so often investigates and
overturns the high and low mythologies of the intersection between
Latinidad and U.S. imperialisms: in Tarta Americana, Martinez
brings this analysis home and into the intimate space of fandom,
queer desire and inscription. This book is Gen X ecstatic in its
ambitious formal range and showcases Martinez’s love affair with
the sublimity of language at all its registers. Tarta takes us into
“You language,” as a discourse meant to deliver us more deeply into
a new form of lyric autohistoria-teoria in what is Martinez’s best
work yet.” —Carmen Giménez
“For too long, literary critics have explained Hispanic American
literature as concerned mainly with “hybridity.” But the extreme
warping of our political landscape demands the discovery and
harnessing of new cultural properties. Enter the master of
multi-perspectival narrative. J. Michael Martinez has constructed
an epic…Tarta Americana is not only a riveting poetic-biopic of
Richie Valens, but a way of understanding culture-making itself.”
—Rodrigo Toscano
“In Tarta Americana, the celluloid and actual Ritchie Valens serve
Martinez as body double and secret sharer, the shape-shifting
persona who walks us through the cloaca of the political present
and media sphere, through our unlived life in the industries of
desire. Ritchie Valens’ ‘We Belong Together’ in the key of My
Bloody Valentine’s Loveless. Ritchie Valens as Rilkean angel and
Orphic repository. Ritchie Valens as the recipient of a centerpiece
epistolary sequence that further proliferates into many-sided
embodiments ever larger than life—the ‘story-shape’ exuberant and
relentless in Martinez’ quest to integrate what was broken or torn
apart. The sonic register spans from the caustic vision of Mexican
folk balladry with its existential vacilada to the custodies of
ixiptla as presence and making present, and the maximalist cascade
of ‘one more nonlinear, / sweat stained star- / lit
night pulsing / police lights / across the rain
streaked / windshield where our most furious /
apprehensions / blur all Rothko red . . . y arriba y arriba.”
—Roberto Tejada
“’Flying guitar, what we knew is you flew,’ says the speaker in J.
Michael Martinez’s dazzling, book-length, riff—code-switched—of Don
McLean’s iconic song, lamenting the day the music died. Yes,
Martinez deploys his signature array of formats and linguistic
registers, only here his focus is one Richard Valenzuela AKA
Ritchie Valens—a brilliant epistolary lens, through which the poet
offers his most personal and vulnerable poemario to date…we are
movingly persuaded when, in the end, the poet says: ‘These pages
/are my hands, / you’re holding / my hands.’” —Francisco Aragón
“Ravenous, cinematic, lost to angsty doldrums of
rollerblading ‘past Hollywood Video's rows/of Styrofoam VHS
dreams’— this is Tarta Americana, a love letter. Martinez
craves a deeper connection, past the iconography of a talent who
died tragically and too young: the further Martinez ‘scrapes the
narrative’ from his own skin, the more something more intimate than
the myth of a man emerges, something ‘outside time, ear into the
soft, it is this emptiness I want: our sacred outside existing only
in each other.’” —Rosebud Ben-Oni
“Richie Valens, immortalized for La Bomba and Donna, dead at 17 in
a plane accident, is here both patron saint and proxy-self, and
Tarta Americana is both bildungsroman and protest song, a story of
family and love, of the pain of growing up, and wide-eyed witness
to the casual racism that culminates in cruel violence. In poems
that pulse with a lyricism so bright is borders on the technicolor,
this gifted poet gives to us what poetry and song have given him:
‘twin consolations to the noise.’” —Dan Beachy-Quick
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