White Space: Essays on Culture, Race, & Writing

Other

57 Post Street,San Francisco CA 94104

12 August, 2021

Description

author Jennifer De Leon in conversation with Journalist Sara Campos. Cosponsored by LatinX in Publishing and Mesa Refuge Cosponsored by LatinX in Publishing and Mesa Refuge Sometime in her twenties, Jennifer De Leon asked herself, "What would you do if you just gave yourself permission?" While her parents had fled Guatemala over three decades earlier when the country was in the grips of genocide and civil war, she hadn't been back since she was a child. She gave herself permission to return—to relearn the Spanish that she had forgotten, unpack her family's history, and begin to make her own way. Alternately honest, funny, and visceral, this powerful collection follows De Leon as she comes of age as a Guatemalan-American woman and learns to navigate the space between two worlds. Never rich or white enough for her posh college, she finds herself equally adrift in her first weeks in her parents' home country. During the years to follow, she would return to Guatemala again and again, meet ex-guerrillera and genocide survivors, get married in the old cobblestoned capital of Antigua, and teach her newborn son about his roots. Jennifer De Leon is author of Don't Ask Me Where I'm From and editor of Wise Latinas: Writers on Higher Education. De Leon has published prose in over a dozen literary journals, including Ploughshares, the Iowa Review, and Michigan Quarterly Review, and is a GrubStreet instructor and board member. She is assistant professor of creative writing at Framingham State University and makes her home in the Boston area. Sara Campos is a writer, lawyer and program officer at a private foundation. Her work has appeared in a number of publications including two anthologies: Basta – an Anthology of Latinas and Gender Violence and The Wandering Song: Central American Writing in the U.S. and a number of other journals and newspapers including: Porterhouse Review,Platte Valley Review, Saint Anne’s Review, 580 Split, Colorlines, AlterNet Media, the LA Review of Books, and the San Francisco Chronicle. She has also received an Elizabeth George Foundation grant, and residencies and fellowships from Las Letras Latinas, VONA, Macondo, Hedgebrook, the Anderson Center, and Mesa Refuge. The Mechanics' Institute Library and Chess Room is a historic membership library, cultural event center, and chess club located in the Financial District of San Francisco, California at 57 Post Street. Founded in 1854 to serve the vocational needs of out-of-work gold miners, the Institute today is a favorite of avid readers, writers, downtown employees, students, film lovers, chess players, and the 21st century nomadic worker who needs a quiet place to plug in a laptop and do research.

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