2023 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation, finalist. First book in English showcasing the life and writings of Bolivia's most celebrated writer and educator, Adela Zamudio (1854-1928). Her birthday is a national holiday in Bolivia. Self-taught, Zamudio was the mother of feminism and women's education in Bolivia, and was active for Indigenous People's rights. The President of Bolivia crowned her with gold laurel leaves in honor of her cultural contributions. Adela Zamudio: Selected Poetry & Prose, translated from the Spanish by Lynette Yetter, presents a bilingual overview of Zamudio's work, much of which was previously untranslated. Several chapters, including the Prologue by Bolivian Zamudio scholar Virginia Ayllon, outline Zamudio's biography and the cultural context in which she wrote. Adela Zamudio's celebration of lesbian love and her ironic cultural critiques continue to resonate today.
2023 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation, finalist. First book in English showcasing the life and writings of Bolivia's most celebrated writer and educator, Adela Zamudio (1854-1928). Her birthday is a national holiday in Bolivia. Self-taught, Zamudio was the mother of feminism and women's education in Bolivia, and was active for Indigenous People's rights. The President of Bolivia crowned her with gold laurel leaves in honor of her cultural contributions. Adela Zamudio: Selected Poetry & Prose, translated from the Spanish by Lynette Yetter, presents a bilingual overview of Zamudio's work, much of which was previously untranslated. Several chapters, including the Prologue by Bolivian Zamudio scholar Virginia Ayllon, outline Zamudio's biography and the cultural context in which she wrote. Adela Zamudio's celebration of lesbian love and her ironic cultural critiques continue to resonate today.
Lynette Yetter is a Pushcart Prize nominated poet who first encountered a bust of Adela Zamudio in a park bearing her name in La Paz, Bolivia. Curious to learn more, since so few women are honored with monuments, Yetter read everything she could find by and about Adela Zamudio, culminating in a summa cum laude Reed College Master of Arts in Liberal Studies (MALS) thesis, and this book. Lynette Yetter is a panpipe-playing Buddhist lesbian artist who shares her time between La Paz, Bolivia and the unceded indigenous territory temporarily called Portland, Oregón. www.LynetteYetter.com Adela Zamudio (1854-1928) is the most celebrated writer of Bolivia, where her birthday is a national holiday. Self- educated, she was the mother of feminism and women's education in Bolivia. She was an activist for women's right to vote, women's right to divorce, and for indigenous rights. Her Quechua-language literacy projects are credited with contributing to the success of indigenous uprisings.
KIRKUS Starred Review: A collection of writings from Bolivian poet,
essayist, and feminist activist Zamudio (1854-1928) addresses
enduring social issues.Though the bulk of the author's body of
work, which spans poetry, prose, and nonfiction, dates back a
century or more (the pieces here were originally published between
1887 and 1942), it's only recently that political and social
conditions have renewed interest in her writings and facilitated
their translations for a global audience. This collection has two
sections, one for poetry and one for prose, focused on themes
including feminism ("Born a Man"), Indigenous identity and
revolution ("End of the Century"), mental health ("To a Suicide"),
and the viability of a battered society ("Masquerade")-subjects
that Zamudio grappled with as a woman far ahead of her time,
culturally speaking. Yetter's translations aptly retain the
exigencies of the author's writing, though the poems do lose their
rhyme schemes in English. In the prose section, Zamudio employs an
almost epistolary, introspective style to document many of
Bolivia's societal and political foibles; one story-"Yesterday's
Meeting"-uses an animal motif (much like George Orwell later used
in Animal Farm (1945)) to relay bureaucratic tensions and flaws in
democracy. Zamudio employs the struggles of women and Indigenous
people as fodder, both for her own work and for broader revolution.
Her imagery is both whimsical and grounded, optimistic and learned;
as she writes in "Poet," "it is necessary that she must dive into /
Life's most bitter dregs; / To know horrid misfortune / And rugged
paths; / Hurt by life's cliffs and thistles, / Wounded by the
shocks of life. / That is inspiration!" We watch and read the news
to understand what's going on in the world, but we also seek out
art to contextualize how all these events make us feel and show us
how to get through them; Zamudio's work serves these purposes
brilliantly.Confident, stirring writing by a prescient poet.
BookLife Editor's Pick review takeaway: Trailblazing poems from a
Bolivian feminist in English at long last.Comparable Titles:
Gabriela Mistral, Rosario Castellanos.
"We should all learn about Adela Zamudio, a major Latin American
figure, by reading this timely book."-Roberto González Echevarría,
Yale University
"Lynette Yetter's sensitive and powerful translation of Adela
Zamudio's poetry and prose is a revelation that has found its
perfect historical moment!"-Lena Lenček, Reed College
"Lynette Yetter's translation of Adela Zamudio's poems and prose
sings! Zamudio's odes to nature, feminist pronouncements, and
revolutionary passages are adeptly and thoughtfully translated.
Yetter's book provides a nuanced and thorough introduction to
Zamudio's work."-Claire Michie, Portland State University
Foundation
"[L]ong awaited . . . ground-breaking . . . worth celebrating . . .
."-Luz Ainaí Morales-Pino, Pontificia Universidad Católica del
Perú
"This . . . bilingual edition is great news for everyone . . .
."-Lucía Stecher, Universidad Alberto Hurtado, Santiago de
Chile
"Beautifully translated, with both passion and nuance, this jewel
of a collection promises to make Adela Zamudio's poetry (and prose)
available to a whole new audience . . . ."-Laura Arnold Leibman,
Reed College
"Lynette Yetter has so brilliantly translated the poetry and prose
of groundbreaking feminist poet Adela Zamudio, that this exquisite
book reads as though it was written this morning, not a hundred
years ago."-Linda Segall Anable, Hollywood studio story analyst
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