The first time I visited Buenos Aires, I was sixteen years old. It was only the second time I'd ever left the States–the first to a country that was not English-speaking–and my experience was meticulously mapped. There were tango shows and treks through the technicolor alleys of La Boca. There were orange trees and street markets and performances at the Teatro Colón. There were handsome waiters not so much older than I was who served me steak, and handsome gauchos who put on the traditional corrida de sortija displays for us—on horseback, armed with thin jousting poles, they'd attempt to pierce the key rings strung with ribbons of white and baby blue that were mounted on an archway overhead. When they speared one, they'd single one of us from the crowd and offer it with a kiss as a souvenir.
This Buenos Aires was the one that lived for many years inside my mind. I was not young or silly or inexperienced enough, even then, that it was lost on me that this had all been carefully curated for an outsider, and yet memories of it still ached with that visceral pang of romance that memories of that age do.
Margarita García Robayo's collection Orquídeas ("Orchids"), on the other hand, offers an entirely different Buenos Aires: one that lives on scaffolds and in backroom bars, at late-night parties and among transgender prostitutes, on mosquito-ridden patios and in butcher shops–in the quotidian, in the ephemeral, as crónicas do. Published daily in newspapers and magazines around the world—but especially in Latin America—this literary genre of short prose may range from witty commentary to melancholic remembrance to fiery political satire. What the best crónicas unfailingly share, however, is that they live in a dark, amorphous space where observance may be faulty, memories may be deliberately amended, character is often irrelevant, tragedy and comedy may coexist, and the reader never quite knows where they stand.
Assembled together between covers like slides in a carousel, García Robayo's crónicas make Buenos Aires begin to look a lot like Brooklyn, or like anywhere, where mundane and absurd observances spin through our heads constantly each day and quickly disappear. And yet the author treats each with such indelible specificity, with such tenderness and disdain, that immersed in each page-long moment, the reader knows it could never have occurred anywhere else but in García Robayo's city, in her world. And so I struggled to translate this book, at first. The words were there but the spirit wasn't. I still wanted the technicolor alleys, the handsome waiters. Never before as a translator have I so struggled to find an author's voice.
In November 2016, two days after the election of Donald Trump, I returned to Buenos Aires. My rose-colored glasses were gone, my guard was down, I was alone, and for a week I spoke to almost no one except shopkeepers and taxi drivers to whom I would struggle to explain the Electoral College in Spanish. I had planned to return to the street fairs, to see some tango, to vacation. Instead, for a week, I walked. From Villa Crespo to San Telmo, Nuñez to the Recoleta, Palermo Soho to the Centro, I walked and walked and there it was: García Robayo's Buenos Aires, in the punk-rock art students and their rustling sketchbooks, in the sex shops in the Retiro, in the tourist traffic across the footbridges over the brown water of the Río Dique, as in the life of any great city seen through a cronista's eyes. I now prefer this version, this vision, the one García Robayo offers, the one glimpsed at in this selection, the one I finally found in her voice upon returning. A Buenos Aires uglier, more pathetic, truer and therefore somehow ever more romantic than the one I had once known.
- Alicia Maria Meier
Pakistan | Short Fiction | Urdu
July, 2017Azra Abbas’s short fiction is known for its enigmatic descriptions and unusual points of view. Whether it is the memoir of a hapless chameleon who gets inadvertently crushed by a group of schoolchildren, or a woman who walks across town wondering when she can scratch her tailbone without attracting notice, Abbas’s stories are always whimsical and mysterious. In this tale, a man contemplates crossing the street, and, it would appear, ultimately fails to do so.
- Daisy Rockwell
José Asunción Silva (1865-1896) is credited, through his assimilation of elements of Symbolism and the work of poets such as Oscar Wilde and Edgar Allan Poe, with helping inaugurate Latin American modernismo. Silva was born in Bogotá to a wealthy family with a love of literature and a history of tragedy. At nineteen, he visited France, where he met the poet Stéphane Mallarmé, but was forced to return to Bogotá to take control of his father’s failing business. Unable to pay his family’s debts, he took a diplomatic post in Caracas, and in 1892 his sister Elvira died, occasioning the composition of “Nocturne III,” one of the most famous poems in the Spanish language. Silva is also the author of a novel, De Sobremesa, which was reconstructed after first having been lost in a shipwreck on his return from Caracas. On May 23, 1896, after a dinner party, he shot himself in the heart. He was thirty years old. The house where he lived in Bogotá is now the Silva Poetry House, a national monument and an important cultural organization that grants the José Asunción Silva poetry prize for the recognition of a lifetime of poetic work.
While Silva is Colombia’s most famous poet (he appears on the 5000 Peso bill), his poems are virtually unknown in the United States. These translations stay close to the overall sense of Silva’s poems, but nevertheless diverge and take liberties. Readers encountering Silva for the first time should note that that while many of these translations fulfill the mandate of translation as it is usually understood, some, such as “Nocturne III,” might best be described as collaborations. I’d compare them to the paintings of Glenn Brown, whose hallucinatory reworkings of old masters result in something both familiar and uncannily new. But while Brown might adapt, say, a Rembrandt—an image long established in the canon—Silva’s poems are not yet widely available in English, so comparisons can’t easily be made. I’ve taken the risk of introducing some of these poems into English in non-traditional translations because I’m hopeful that more normative translations of Silva will follow, but also because my original intention in translating Silva was more personal: I sought to engage, as an American of Colombian descent, on my own terms with the work of one of Colombia’s most important poets. I was pleased to find not the antisocial, “diseased” modernist many Latin American critics have dismissively accused Silva of being,* but, to the contrary, a poet whose work centers around the question of life—both life as such, in all its scintillation and strangeness, and the complex question of how to live. The questions Silva poses—whether poetry can be lived, whether the price of stability isn’t a forfeiture of life itself, and how life and the numerous deaths-in-life manifest themselves—are as urgent as ever. My primary objective as a translator was thus to convey the urgency and originality of Silva’s vision and the consistency of his thought.
* For an analysis of Silva’s reception in Latin America, see Alfreo Villanueva-Collado’s “Masculine Culture, Feminoid Modernism: José Asunción Silva and ‘El mal metafísico’” (Confluencia, Volume 19, Number 2). Villanueva-Collado looks at Silva and others to explore “the relationship between the paradigm shift called Modernity, understood as a national project gendered as masculine, and the concept of Modernism as a pathogen which feminizes culture,” and argues that “Such a relationship lies at the center of Latin American critical and cultural practice and, operating outside critical consciousness, still shapes and determines cultural and literary criticism, especially with respect to Latin American turn-of-the-century narrative production.”
- Robert Fernandez
Greece | Modern Greek | Novella (excerpt)
July, 2017This is a self-standing excerpt of my first book, the novella Karyotype, which was published by Kichli in November 2014 in Greece. The book is a third-person narration of the years a Greek immigrant biologist spent in Oxford, UK. It describes, in a low-temperature, low-pace, melodic prose, how the protagonist uses his work to address questions about himself and the ties to his family and past. Gradually, he becomes his own “guinea pig,” isolating himself from all social activities, but struggling to find any answer whatsoever. Still, in his pursuit of answers, fears and agonies common to all people of his generation (born in the late ‘70s-early ‘80s) are revealed and revisited. The book was very warmly received by both readers and literary critics. According to one of the reviews: "Papantonis drives [the protagonist's] ego to its limits while simultaneously putting in play its interaction with the smoldering metal of History in the most ingenious way" (To Vima, January 2015). According to another: "This first book is not a cosmopolitan one, because it is not, in its essence, Greek. It is European. Papantonis writes based on his British experience without any filters, like someone who has lost his Greek identity. His protagonist does not compare "here" to "there," as only "there" exists" (The Books’ Journal, January 2016). Hence, this excerpt, that finishes with an emotional and empathetic monologue from the protagonist's sister, is a timely read, given the large sociopolitical changes on both sides of the Atlantic.
The excerpt featured here was translated by me, the author, and edited by Dr. Cornelia Cook, a Senior Lecturer of English Literature at the Queen Mary University of London, UK.
- Akis Papantonis
Israel | Poetry (excerpts) | Yiddish
July, 2017The following poems are taken from the expanded edition of Abraham Sutzkever’s collection Poems from My Diary, which was published in 1985. Considered his masterpiece, the poems in this collection range from musings on Sutzkever’s daily life in Israel and memories of life in Vilna, to highly imaginative lyrics. They are much like what they sound like they would be from their title, while they are also much more.
- Maia Evrona
In this post, editor and contributing translator Alexis Almeida introduces her in-progress anthology of poetry by women writers living in Argentina. Please see the five posts that follow for poetry that will be featured in the anthology.
Argentina | Poetry (excerpt) | Spanish
May, 2017The poetry featured here will appear in an in-progress anthology of poetry by women writers living in Argentina. Please see the above post for editor and contributing translator Alexis Almeida's introduction to the project.
Argentina | Poetry (excerpt) | Spanish
May, 2017The poetry featured here will appear in an in-progress anthology of poetry by women writers living in Argentina. Please see the above post for editor and contributing translator Alexis Almeida's introduction to the project.
Argentina | Poetry (excerpts) | Spanish
May, 2017The poetry featured here will appear in an in-progress anthology of poetry by women writers living in Argentina. Please see the above post for editor and contributing translator Alexis Almeida's introduction to the project.
Argentina | Poetry (excerpt) | Spanish
May, 2017The poetry featured here will appear in an in-progress anthology of poetry by women writers living in Argentina. Please see the above post for editor and contributing translator Alexis Almeida's introduction to the project.
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