Landsmoder , by the Salvadoran poet, historian, and performance artist Elena Salamanca, is a searing, and sometimes grotesque, exploration of the intersections between nationalism, dogma, patriarchy, and violence. Originally read aloud from the oldest standing monument in San Salvador’s centro histórico, the performance poems in Landsmoder retool the laudatory pomp of patriotic ceremony to protest the weaponization of national myth as a mask for erasure, cruelty, and neglect at the hands of the state. This unflinching collection, whose title comes from a Norwegian word that Salamanca translates as “madre de la patria” — or “mother of the nation/homeland/fatherland”— is a work of feminist grief, rage, and irony populated with churning wombs, bloodied flags, and ratteboned she-wolves. Appearing now in a bilingual edition nearly a decade after it was first performed, Landsmoder remains an urgent subversion, loud as ever, both on and off the page.
Elizabeth Hawkins Boeken
Deze Amerikaanse auteur duikt in haar schrijven diep in de ingrijpende gevolgen van familiegeschiedenis en persoonlijk trauma. Haar werk onderzoekt de blijvende effecten van alcoholisme en maatschappelijke stigma op individuen en volgende generaties. Met gevoeligheid en empathie belicht ze complexe relaties en het genezingsproces, en biedt ze lezers inzicht in het overwinnen van tegenspoed en het vinden van begrip.
