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Luz María "Luzma" Umpierre-Herrera (born 1947) is a Puerto Rican human rights advocate, New-Humanist educator, poet, and scholar. Umpierre-Herrera works on the topics of activism and social equality, the immigrant experience, and bilingualism in the United States, and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) issues. Umpierre has published ten poetry books and has had numerous essays published in academic journals.

Luz María Umpierre
Born1947 (age 7475)
Santurce, Puerto Rico
OccupationHuman Rights Advocate, New-Humanist Educator, Poet, and Scholar
NationalityAmerican
Notable worksThe Margarita Poems, For Christine, Y otras desgracias/And Other Misfortunes, En el país de las maravillas, Pour toi/For Moira, Our Only Island, I'm Still Standing: 30 Years of Poetry.
Notable awardsMichael Lynch Award for Service LGBT(MLA), Distinguished Woman of Maine, Distinguished Alumna in the Humanities (Universidad del Sagrado Corazón), Woman of the Year (Western Kentucky University), Ford Foundation Fellow, NEH Grant.
Website
LuzmaUmpierre.com

Life


Luz María Umpierre was born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, in 1947,[1] and grew up in a working-class neighborhood called "La veintiuna" (Stop 21) in a household with sixteen people. Her mother was born in Puerto Rico and grew up in New York City; for this reason, Umpierre was exposed to both English and Spanish as a child. Her father was a government worker. Umpierre studied at the Sacred Heart Academy and at the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón,[1] both in Puerto Rico, graduating from both with honors.[2][citation needed]

After several years of teaching at the Academia María Reina in San Juan, Umpierre felt that she was "sexile." The prejudice she experienced as an open lesbian on the island contributed to her moving to the mainland in 1974.[3] As she followed her academic path, she was shocked to see that in the United States she was prejudiced against not only for her sexual orientation but also for her Puerto Rican origin and ethnicity.[citation needed] These experiences led her to decide to mentor underprivileged and exiled students, Puerto Rican-born like her and immigrants.


Education and career


She earned her B.A., with honors, in Spanish and Humanities from the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón in 1970. In 1976, she received her M.A. in Spanish (Caribbean Literature) from Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, where she also completed her Ph.D. in Spanish (1978). Umpierre also completed Post Doctoral Studies in the Fields of: Literary Theory at the University of Kansas (1981-1982), University Administration (Recruitment and Retention of Minorities) as a State of New Jersey/Woodrow Wilson International Center Fellow (1986), and Management and Policy at the New School for Social Research, Milano School-Syracuse Campus (1995-1996).

After finishing her Ph.D. in 1978, Umpierre went on to teach at several institutions. She was the first Puerto Rican to receive tenure at the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Rutgers University, where she taught the very first graduate-level course on Colonial Latin American Literature. She also created the first courses on Caribbean Literature and Culture at Rutgers University, as well as one of the first courses on Latinas in the U.S. to be taught in the country. [citation needed]She was the first openly Lesbian Latina Scholar in Residence in Women Studies at Penn State University.[2]

Her presence as an open lesbian Latina academic at Rutgers was met with a conservative backlash.[citation needed] She was banned in 1989 from teaching at the university for her texts on the inclusion of Gay and Lesbian in her literature classes and also after speaking at the March on Washington, DC of 1987.[4] This setback only reinforced her activism regarding LGBT Studies, as she's continued to be an activist for the inclusion of LGBT topics in academia.

After leaving Rutgers, she worked as Head and Professor of the Department of Modern Languages and Intercultural Studies and Folklore at Western Kentucky University (WKU). It was while working at WKU, that Umpierre received the "Woman of the Year" award.[5] She continued to work with the underprivileged and societal outcasts.

In 1992, she became a faculty member at the State University of New York –Brockport (SUNY) and was a Professor of Foreign Languages and literature. Again, she was met with academic backlash for her activism for LGBT rights. [citation needed] In 1992, she was accused by SUNY of "exposing students to homosexuality"[citation needed] for teaching literature from a Homocriticism view and was suspended for two years. She subsequently became homeless, yet continued her work as an advocate for equality in academia.

Umpierre eventually relocated to Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, where she was an Associate Professor for Classic and Romance Languages and literature, along with Women Studies in 1998. She also expanded the curriculum of this university to include adding courses dealing with Latina Literature and Culture, Creative Writing, and Latin American Studies. She eventually left Bates College of her choosing in 2002 to nurture her writing career and continue promoting activist causes.


Poetry


Umpierre has published six books of poetry and two chapbooks or "hojas poéticas." She has received critical attention, particularly from women, feminist, and queer scholars.[6][7][failed verification]

Umpierre is a bilingual poet who writes in English and Spanish and sometimes mixes both languages in the same poem.[8][9] Her work was published by tatiana de la tierra in de la tierra's bilingual magazine, Esto no tiene nombre, for Latina lesbians.[10] She also supported de la tierra's other magazine, conmoción, which was a continuation and expansion of esto meant to be a platform for conversation about Latina lesbians through publishing work like Umpierre's.[11] In her work, she establishes a conversation[original research?] with many American, Latin American, and Puerto Rican women poets and writers such as Sylvia Plath, Virginia Woolf, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Julia de Burgos, and Sandra María Esteves. Noted among these is the poetical exchange she carried for years with Nuyorican minor poet Sandra María Esteves; this exchange was lauded in Europe and the US and was included in a special radio program of the MLA because of its uniqueness[citation needed].

Umpierre started out her poetry career with the publication of Una puertorriqueña en Penna (1979), whose title can be translated as "A Puerto Rican woman in Pennsylvania" or "A Puerto Rican woman in pain."[original research?] In this book, the author offers poems that comment on the discrimination that the Puerto Rican community faced in Philadelphia. The final poem in that collection: "Mascarada la vida", signals towards the lesbian themes which she would develop further in other collections[original research?]. Umpierre also comments on the prejudice against Puerto Ricans in institutions of higher education, particularly in Spanish departments that judged Puerto Rican Spanish as deficient or incorrect.[citation needed] She also explores these topics in her second and third books, En el país de las maravillas (Kempis puertorriqueño) (1982) and . . . Y otras desgracias/And Other Misfortunes. . . (1985), which shows a marked turn towards more bilingualism and carries openly Lesbian poems[original research?]. The same book was included as a Stonewall Era publication.

One of Umpierre's books is The Margarita Poems (1987),[12] where she discusses her lesbianism and offers highly erotic poems about lesbian love. The book also discusses issues of feminist sisterhood, Puerto Rican independence, and immigrant experience. In the 1990s, she published her book For Christine (1995). In the 2000s, she published two chapbooks or "hojas poéticas": Pour toi/For Moira (2005) and Our Only Island—for Nemir (2009). A volume of her complete works edited by Carmen S. Rivera and Daniel Torres was published in 2011.[13]


Scholarship


Umpierre has published two books of literary criticism focusing on Puerto Rican literature and numerous critical articles mostly on Caribbean literature and women authors. She is one of the few people who has written on Nemir Matos' poems[citation needed]. She is advances a "homocritical" theory of reading, which she labels as "Homocriticism", suggesting that homosexual readers can be more attuned to perceiving hidden queer meaning in a literary work. Her first article on this subject, appeared in Collages & Bricolages in 1993 under the title "On Critical Diversity" and dealt with the book Fragmentos a su imán by José Lezama Lima although it was written in the early 1980s and taught at Rutgers University in Graduate Seminars during that decade. She developed her ideas further on this topic in an article on Carmen Lugo Filippi's short story "Milagros, calle Mercurio" [Milagros, Mercury Street].[14]


Awards, nominations and noted posts



List of works



Poetry



Literary criticism



See also



References


  1. Rivera, Carmen Haydee (2008-03-22). ""Language is our only homeland": an interview with Luz Maria Umpierre". CENTRO: Journal of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies. 20 (1).
  2. "World Heritage Sites", Encyclopedia of Environment and Society, SAGE Publications, Inc., 2007, doi:10.4135/9781412953924.n1213, ISBN 9781412927611
  3. "Luz María Umpierre Herrera [entrevista selecta]". elpostantillano.net. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  4. Gregory, Sara (2018-06-19). "Raging Against Cultural Amnesia: Tatiana de la tierra and Latina Lesbian Herstory". Autostraddle. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  5. In other words: literature by Latinas of the United States. Fernández, Roberta., Franco, Jean. Houston, Tex.: Arte Público Press. 1994. ISBN 978-1-61192-727-6. OCLC 621974519.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. La Fountain-Stokes, Lawrence. Queer Ricans: Cultures and Sexualities in the Diaspora. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009. ISBN 0-8166-4092-0
  7. Martínez, Elena M. Lesbian Voices from Latin America: Breaking Ground. New York: Garland Publishing, 1996. ISBN 0-8153-1349-7
  8. Aparicio, Frances. "La Vida es un Spanglish Disparatero: Bilingualism in Nuyorican Poetry." In European Perspectives on Hispanic Literature in the United States, ed. Genevieve Fabre, 147-60. Houston: Arte Público Press, 1988. ISBN 0-934770-84-0
  9. Simounet, Alma. "Delegitimizing Oppressive Culture: The Voice of Counter-Discourse in Umpierre's Poetic Work." Archived 2010-05-24 at the Wayback Machine CENTRO: Journal of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies 20.1 (Spring 2008):22-35.
  10. PhD, María Dolores Costa (2003-06-01). "Latina Lesbian Writers and Performers". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 7 (3): 5–27. doi:10.1300/J155v07n03_02. ISSN 1089-4160. PMID 24816051. S2CID 149030062.
  11. De La Tierra, Tatiana. "Activist Latina Lesbian Publishing: esto no tiene nombre and conmoción." I am Aztldn: The Personal Essay in Chicano Studies, ed. Chon A. Noriega and Wendy Belcher (Los Angeles: UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press, 2004) 194.
  12. "The Margarita Poems by Luz María Umpierre - Northampton Review of Latina Books". Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  13. Umpierre, Luz María. I'm Still Standing: Treinta años de poesía/Thirty Years of Poetry, eds. Carmen S. Rivera and Daniel Torres. [Orlando and Fredonia,FL,NY]: SUNY: Fredonia, 2011. ISBN 978-1-257-99437-3
  14. Umpierre, Luz María. "Lesbian Tantalizing in Carmen Lugo Filippi's 'Milagros, calle Mercurio'" which was presented at the MLA in the early 1980s also and later published in ¿Entiendes? Queer Readings, Hispanic Writings, eds. Emilie Bergmann and Paul Julian Smith, 306-14. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-8223-1615-3

На других языках


- [en] Luz María Umpierre

[fr] Luz María Umpierre

Luz María Umpierre Herrera, née en 1947 à San Juan à Porto Rico, est une poétesse, professeure d'université et défenseure des droits de humains portoricaine.



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