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Afro-Latino Identity and the Poetry of Tato Laviera
William Luis , born and raised in New York City, is the Chancellor's Professor of Spanish at Vanderbilt University.
William Luis
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2023
Poet Jesús Abraham “Tato” Laviera was a significant figure in the Nuyorican movement, a cultural movement of people who are of Puerto Rican origin or descent who reside in New York City. Laviera was born in 1951 in Puerto Rico. His family moved to New York City in 1960, and he was educated at Cornell University and Brooklyn College.
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Poet Jesús Abraham “Tato” Laviera was a significant figure in the Nuyorican movement, a cultural movement of people who are of Puerto Rican origin or descent who reside in New York City. Laviera was born in 1951 in Puerto Rico. His family moved to New York City in 1960, and he was educated at Cornell University and Brooklyn College.
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Review - Literature and Arts of the Americas, 2014
Jesus Abraham “Tato” Laviera (April 9, 1951–November 1, 2013) was a New York poet. Though born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, he was reared and educated, and worked, lived, and died in New York.
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Jesus Abraham “Tato” Laviera (April 9, 1951–November 1, 2013) was a New York poet. Though born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, he was reared and educated, and worked, lived, and died in New York.
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Migration and Decolonial Politics in Two Afro-Latino Poets: “Pachín” Marín and “Tato” Laviera
Review - Literature and Arts of the Americas, 2014Francisco Gonzalo “Pachin” Marin (1863–1897), Afro-Puertorriqueno, exiled poet, typesetter, journalist, and revolutionary, belongs to an Afro-Latina/o tradition in the late nineteenth century that ...
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Selección de poesías de Tato Laviera
Centro de Estudios de Teoría y Crítica ...
Katatay
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The Playful "i" in Tato Laviera's Poetry: An Arte poética
Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association, 2013The notion of belonging to a broader cultural landscape becomes obvious in the writer's intentions to offer a poetry that is accessible to the people, while at the same time tackling fundamental identity crossroads pertaining to social status, race and ethnicity, cultural heritage, and language. Attuned to the goal of accessibility, Laviera's poetry is
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