martes, febrero 19, 2013

OUT Magazine: Luis Negrón

The Queen of Satire

2.18.2013

By Bruce Benderson

The stories of Puerto Rico’s Luis Negron conjure a world that gay assimilation sought to excise.
Photography by Roland Hernández

Did gay satire -- all satire -- die with Gore Vidal? Have real life and real politics become so ridiculous that there’s no way to exaggerate them? Are we all bad jokes? Should we ask Jon Stewart?
The current problem with satire, in fact, is its target. When it comes to our middle-class culture, the elephant in the room is long gone. Everything about late capitalism that’s silly, dishonest, hypocritical, or selfish was slashed and burned decades ago. Bret Easton Ellis, with his American Psycho, was the last American literary satirist; if you want to see society skewered, don’t look for it on these shores.

Enter Puerto Rican writer Luis Negrón, whose story collection Mundo Cruel is a laugh-out-loud exposé of queens abandoned by our assimilationist gay revolution. Negrón has a knack for portraying the insight and pathos that arise when old-school romantic, wounded souls collide. In nine short fictional monologues, he brilliantly depicts the campy queers, effeminate banter, and rough trade of Santurce, a low-rent neighborhood in San Juan.

READ: The Title Story, "Mundo Cruel," Here
Negrón’s humor and heart put him in the canon of gay high satire headed by Manuel Puig, the author of Kiss of the Spider Woman, who was also one of my inspirations.

Bruce Benderson: Is satire dead? Or are there other writers writing good social satire like you?
Luis Negrón: I think everything has gone serious—gay culture, too. We seem to have forgotten that laughter is a way of sheltering ourselves from pain. In Mundo Cruel, I write about poverty and people who live in the margins of the margins. I could never have written this book if it hadn’t been for the humor.

I think one reason satire seems all but dead is because people no longer observe society as closely anymore -- they’re just living in it, unaware of what they’re doing.
Satire is also an invitation to look at ourselves, to make fun of ourselves, and we’re not doing that, either.
Be honest: Is it your own story you’re telling in these monologues?
No. I was a good boy; really, really shy. Reading books all the time. A lot of people were shocked when they read Mundo Cruel, because I’m always much more serious. You know, when the book came out, some people on the Internet were screaming about it being homophobic because I used words like queen and faggot. These two professors -- a lesbian and a gay guy -- were supposed to present the book at a college in Mayaguez here in Puerto Rico, and they refused. The gay guy started to tell me my book is “sad,” that I portrayed the gay world in a pathetic way. He said there were so many good things happening for gays these days, so why did I choose to show gays who were into straight guys and other depressing stuff like that, when it was all so passé? “I’m not a gay guy, I’m a queen,” I told him. “I live in a very poor section of San Juan. I go to the straight bar and they know I’m a queen, but I’m there and I like that.”

I would have called him a bourgeois pig and a classist.
The lesbian objected to the way I portrayed lesbians in the story “The Vampire of Moca,” because I had them listening to Shakira. She said I had a responsibility to show them in a better light.

I thought that story had a positive portrait of lesbians. What the hell’s wrong with Shakira?
In a way I am making fun of gay people nowadays -- the ones who think they’re safe because they’re white and good-looking and have money. There are other gays who live in an entirely different economic reality, and that’s who I am. If they’d come to my neighborhood, they would have seen what I’m talking about.

Is Santurce a gay neighborhood of San Juan?
Not in the sense that you have in the U.S. Dominicans, Haitians, transsexuals, drug addicts, old-school gays -- they all live here. But you aren’t going to see a rainbow flag in a store. Poverty put us together.

Is there any character in these stories with whom you especially identify?
I would say it’s the kid in “The Garden” who makes love with his older partner right as he’s dying of AIDS. I would fall in love very easily when I was his age, and I loved musicals and telenovelas.

You mean you loved The Sound of Music like him?
Yes. I’m a sissy and I don’t care.
 

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Yolanda Arroyo Pizarro (Guaynabo, 1970). Es novelista, cuentista y ensayista puertorriqueña. Fue elegida una de las escritoras latinoamericanas más importantes menores de 39 años del Bogotá39 convocado por la UNESCO, el Hay Festival y la Secretaría de Cultura de Bogotá por motivo de celebrar a Bogotá como Capital Mundial del libro 2007. Acaba de recibir Residency Grant Award 2011 del National Hispanic Cultural Center en Nuevo México. Es autora de los libros de cuentos, ‘Avalancha’ (2011), ‘Historias para morderte los labios’ (Finalista PEN Club 2010), y ‘Ojos de Luna’ (Segundo Premio Nacional 2008, Instituto de Literatura Puertorriqueña; Libro del Año 2007 Periódico El Nuevo Día), además de los libros de poesía ‘Medialengua’ (2010) y Perseidas (2011). Ha publicado las novelas ‘Los documentados’ (Finalista Premio PEN Club 2006) y Caparazones (2010, publicada en Puerto Rico y España).

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