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Footwork

Footwork

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Severo Sarduy

Novelist, poet, painter, and literary theorist, Severo Sarduy was one of the most groundbreaking Latin American writers of the twentieth century. Born in Camagüey, Cuba in 1937, he moved to Havana in 1956 to study medicine, but soon gave up his scientific pursuits for the arts. From 1960 until the time of his death, the poet lived in Paris where he worked with Roland Barthes, Julia Kristeva, and many others, on the literary magazine Tel Quel. Sarduy died due to complications with AIDS in 1993.

Although Sarduy’s novels have been translated into English and received praise from such writers as Richard Howard and James McCourt, this is the first collection of his poetry to appear in English translation. Footwork represents poems from throughout Sarduy’s life, following the thrilling trajectory of a great thinker.

David Francis translated the poems from Spanish into an acrobatic English. He writes, Footwork is “a body of work that sings on its own, that celebrates the carnal life, the sensual experiences of dance, of painting, food, music, and sexual pleasure, but that also recognizes—in these pleasures—the imminence of one’s passing.”

Sarduy invents new forms to engage questions of identity, specifically how his own and Cuba’s Spanish, African, and Chinese heritage is intrinsically intertwined with Cuba’s history of slavery and indentured labor. As Francis writes, “Severo Sarduy was not known to follow convention. Nor did he think that conventional approaches to storytelling or lyrical composition could capture the complexities of human behavior or personal and national identity.”

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