MACONDO
A HOMELAND FOR WRITERS
MACONDO AT AWP 2024 Kansas City
Macondo Writers Workshop members Karina Muñiz-Pagán, Maria-Luisa Ornelas-June, Tisha Marie Reichle-Aguilera, and Norma Elia Cantú will be hosting an offsite reading at AWP in Kansas City, Missouri February 7-10, 2024. More details coming soon!
Macondista Readings: Join us for three nights of Macondista Readings. Free and open to the public.
MACONDO WRITERS WORKSHOP OPEN MIC READING
Thursday July 27, 2023 ; 7-8:30 p.m. CST
Trinity University, Dicke Hall, Room 104
1 Trinity Pl, San Antonio, TX 78212
MACONDO WRITERS WORKSHOP OPEN MIC READING
Friday, July 28, 2023 ; 7-9 p.m. CST
Trinity University, Dicke Hall, Room 104
1 Trinity Pl, San Antonio, TX 78212
MACONDO WRITERS WORKSHOP GUEST FACULTY READING AND PACHANGA
Featuring: Rigoberto González, Sharon Bridgforth, John Phillip Santos reading work by Ishmael Reed and Richard Blanco. The MC will be Nely Galán, with music by DJ Despeinada.
Saturday July 29, 2023 ; (doors open at 6:30pm) event begins at 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. CST
The Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, 922 San Pedro Ave, San Antonio.
Texas Public Radio feature on Macondo
Fronteras: ‘It’s a different kind of workshop’: Writers with conciencia gather at this month’s Macondo Writers Workshop
An annual workshop in San Antonio gathers select writers from across the country for an intensive and rewarding five-day experience.
The Macondo Writers Workshop was founded in 1995 at the kitchen table of famed writer, Sandra Cisneros.
The name stems from the fictional town at the center of Gabriel García Márquez’s novel, A Hundred Years of Solitude.
Writers of all genres are able to attend seminars led by esteemed faculty and give public readings of their work. Over the years, featured writers — or Macondistas — have included John Phillip Santos, Richard Blanco, and Reyna Grande.
Read the full article at tpr.org
NEW MACONDISTAS JOINING THE WORKSHOP IN 2023
Rosanna Alvarez • Cathy Arellano • Alondra Ceballos • Margarita Cruz • Valeka Cruz • César L. De León • Maya Garcia • Violeta Garza • Mariana Goycoechea • Christine Kandic Torres • Tracy Mann • Ruthie Marleneé • Maribel Martínez • Jennifer Thuy Vi Nguyen • Maria-Luisa Ornelas-June • Lorena Ortiz • Kimi Ramírez • Yaccaira Salvatierra • Zelene Suchilt • Lesley Téllez • Denise Tolan • Eddie Vega • Kira Witkin
ANNOUNCING THE RECIPIENT OF THE 2023 GLORIA EVANGELINA ANZALDÚA AWARD
VICENTE LOZANO
The Board of the Macondo Writers Workshop has selected long-time Macondista and indefatigable supporter Vicente Lozano for the Macondo Writers Workshop 2022 Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa Award. The award includes registration and fees at the Chuparosa level as well as a travel stipend to attend the Macondo Writers Workshop in the summer of 2023.
Named in honor of Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa, a queer South Texas writer and thinker, who did groundbreaking work and whose life as a writer exemplifies the tenets of the Macondo Writers Workshop, the award honors her life and work. Anzaldúa’s legacy is one of resilience and perseverance and she embodies a lifelong commitment to “the work.” For Anzaldúa, writing meant transformation and discovery. One of her more famous quotes is “By writing I put order in the world, give it a handle so I can grasp it.” We believe the award represents Macondo’s effort to empower a Macondista by offering a space to do the same.
The Macondo Writers Workshop board selects the annual awardee on the basis of an exceptional record of service and generosity to the Macondo Writers Workshop community. Lozano has embodied a spirit of generosity and this award seeks to honor him and support him as a writer and valued community member.
True Tales of Family: A Reading by Five Macondistas
Fri, September 30, 2022, 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM PDT – A reading with Macondo Writers Workshop alum Pat Alderete, Lucy Rodriguez-Hanley, Cecilia Caballero, Juanita E. Mantz, & Allison Hedge Coke.
Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center – 681 Venice Blvd Venice Beach Los Angeles, CA 90291
Click here for more event info.
Announcing New Macondistas Joining the Workshop in 2022
Susana Praver-Perez • Celine Aenille-Rocha • Yollotl Azure Lopez • JoAnn Balingit • Martha Bátiz • Catalina Bartlett • Angela Boyd • Beatriz Brenes • Beto Caradepiedra • Yvette DeChavez • Casey Eccles • Taylor Garcia • Alma M. Garcia • Gerónima Garza • Oso Guardiola • Melissa Mora Hidalgo • Victoria Hurtado-Anguio • Mónica Ibarra Parle • Anna Lapera • Mariel Milagros Jungkunz • Alicia Mireles Christoff • Gloria Muñoz • Catalina Ocampo Londoño • Violeta Orozco • Luivette Resto • Ryan Rivas • Lucy Rodriguez-Hanley • Elda Maria Roman • Isabel Santos • Verónica Solís • Dianne Solís • Angel Sutjipto • Ariana Vigil
MACONDO BEGINS A NEW PARTNERSHIP WITH TRINITY UNIVERSITY
Macondo Writers Workshop will be moving its summer workshop to Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas in 2022. This exciting and momentous move is part of a new five-year partnership.
Gregg Barrios, ¡Presente!
CHICANO POLYMATH PASSES INTO THE PANTHEON OF GREAT RAZA ARTISTS, INTELLECTUALS, AND PROVOCATEURS
BY B. V. OLGUÍN
Gregg Barrios—Chicano educator, poet, playwright, journalist, activist, and all around movimientista—passed into the pantheon of late great Raza artists, intellectuals, and provocateurs on August 17, 2021. He was 80 years old, and lived a life at the center of foundational eras and multiple social and political movements in the US and globally. Gregg, as he preferred to be called, was an active if unsung participant and frequent instigator in Chicanx Movement struggles in various sites throughout Aztlán, intersecting LGBTQI+ Movement activities, and related institutional interventions in education, media, arts, and myriad social and political contexts.
Gregg’s greatness arose from his nimble navigation of the complexities and contradictions of Chicanx history, life, culture and politics. Indeed, his life involved the type of complex Chicanx realities and negotiations endemic to colonized and marginalized people, yet he also insisted on claiming the center as his own. He loved his own Tejano culture and also saw no contradiction in his dual love of broader intersecting cultures, from Elvis to David Bowie to Juan Gabriel and beyond.
His vexed, yet for him completely normal, navigations of his US and Chicanx identity involved service in the US Air Force Reserves during the Vietnam War, in which he participated in the transportation of wounded US soldiers returning to the US from Vietnam through Germany. While stationed at Bergstrom Air Force Base in Austin, Texas, he utilized the GI Bill to attend the University of Texas at Austin part-time. There he was active in developing that institution’s avant garde film movement, helping to found the renowned Cinema 40 Film Club, and promoting numerous events with world renowned filmmakers. He also co-founded the iconoclastic underground newspaper, The Rag, which is still in production.
Sandra Cisneros Loves to Read About Women Waging Battle
“These are not your typical war stories,” says the writer Sandra Cisneros, whose new book is “Martita, I Remember You.”
What books are on your night stand?
I have a New Mexican writing desk on one side of my bed and an antique Mexican trunk on the other. Because of this, there are too many books stacked in precarious towers waiting to collapse whenever I reach for anything, the newer books burying the older. When I have to search for a book, it’s like excavating Tenochtitlán. Thanks to this interview, I’ve finally done some housecleaning. Here are some of the titles I found:
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