San Antonio is one of four cities (the others being Houston,
Albuquerque, and Tuscon) that will host, what Diaz has dubbed,
“underground libraries,” community-minded reference/lending facilities
forged with the primary purpose of keeping at least four copies of each
book that was taken out of Arizona classrooms when the HB2281 law
(sounds like a virus vaccine, no?) effectively killed off Tucson's
ethnic studies and sent boxes of Latino literature to a book depository
for the interim.
Greg Harman - The
shelves at SWU's Underground Library are organized by first edition,
signed, fiction, poetry, and banned. Underground Librarian Diana Lopez
said that recognized local writers like Sandra Cisneros and Dagoberto
Gilb have contributed works to the effort. SA Poet Laureate Carmen
Tafolla even donated multiple copies of her book of poetry, Curandera,
republished with "Banned in Arizona" on the cover.
San Antonio's Underground Library erupts into operation this Thursday,
May 10, with a reading from Gustavo Arellano, the much-syndicated Ask a
Mexican columnist, who has just written a subversively salivating book
called Taco USA (see review "Time of Mex-Tex").
On Arizona's recent legislative policies, the author, who is a great
fan of Librotraficante, says: "Those idiot politicians thought that
Mexicans and their allies would just allow them to strip the libraries
and classrooms of such books; instead, it created the opposite effect.
Sure, Arizona law has now pushed Latino literature to the back of the
burro, but now you have a vibrant movement of people pushing and reading
these books, and authors more than willing to engage in such actions to
promote literature. To use that terrible but so apropos cliche, the
sleeping Mexican has woken up." •
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