The Hispanic Studies Professor Who Writes Literary Fiction
July 5, 2017
Amanda Nagy
Sergio Guti茅rrez Negr贸n is assistant professor of Hispanic studies.
Photo credit: Jennifer Manna
A native of Puerto Rico, Negr贸n came to 91直播 as a visiting faculty member in 2015. His teaching and research centers on 19th century Mexican and Caribbean literature and intellectual history.
Sergio Guti茅rrez Negr贸n tells his students not to fear the blank page. Make time to be creative. Write something, even it you鈥檙e not happy with it.
Negr贸n follows his own advice, rising at 6 a.m. every day to work on his craft. But he admits it can be a difficult balancing act, switching between academic and creative gears. A newly appointed assistant professor in the Hispanic Studies Department, Negr贸n has been named one of this year鈥檚 best fiction writers under the age of 40 across Latin America by the .
A native of Puerto Rico, Negr贸n came to 91直播 as a visiting faculty member in 2015. His teaching and research centers on 19th century Mexican and Caribbean literature and intellectual history.
He has written two novels that have been published in Puerto Rico. The first, Palacio (2011), received an honorable mention from the Puerto Rico-PEN Club in 2011. The second, Dicen que los dormidos (Say that asleep), published in 2013, received the Instituto de Cultura Puertorrique帽a's National Novel Prize in Puerto Rico.
Following the critical acclaim of his second novel, Negr贸n received the Premio Nuevas Voces (New Voice Award) from the Festival de la Palabra, an accolade given to promising up-and-coming Puerto Rican authors.
Negr贸n describes Palacio as a love story about a Puerto Rican man who moves to Atlanta (where Negr贸n received his PhD at Emory University) and the woman he marries, who disappears. 鈥淎fter that, it gets really weird, really fast,鈥 he says.
Dicen que los dormidos is about contemporary violence in Puerto Rico and how it impacts the everyday life of innocent bystanders. The story follows the fate of a young man mistaken for another person and severely wounded in a drive-by shooting. The man falls into a coma, and when he wakes, he tries to make sense of his new reality. 鈥淭he long reflection in the novel is, can violence ever be an accident? That question has more to do with the worsening crime and drug epidemic in the last decade or so.鈥
Negr贸n explains that the increase in crime is a symptom of Puerto Rico鈥檚 economic crisis. The island has been in a recession since 2006. At the same time, a huge chunk of the population is emigrating to the United States鈥攁bout half a million people in the last 12 years鈥攚ith some estimating the exodus will be as big as the migration of the 1950s, when Puerto Ricans settled in cities such as Chicago and nearby Lorain, Ohio.
鈥淚t鈥檚 mostly the middle class and working class people who are migrating, so it鈥檚 people who effectively who could get the country out of recession, but they are leaving because there are no jobs or because the jobs that are available don鈥檛 have good pay and good benefits. So this has led to a lot of problems,鈥 says Negr贸n, whose brother and sister and several close friends from the island have all recently relocated to the U.S.
Moving from the Puerto Rico to the mainland is like moving from one state to another, but its political status is somewhat confusing to most Americans.
鈥淧uerto Rico is this kind of in-between space,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y generation and the ones that have followed are very Latin American in certain ways, but we鈥檙e also very American in that most of the popular culture we consume is American. The Puerto Rican aspiration of middle class feels closer to American aspirations. When I鈥檓 talking with someone in the U.S. who is the same age, I feel like we have all the same references, but there鈥檚 something that doesn鈥檛 quite fit. At the same time, if I鈥檓 talking with someone from Latin America who鈥檚 the same age, I feel we have almost the same references, but something doesn鈥檛 fit.鈥
Negr贸n came to 91直播 with his wife, Assistant Professor of Early Modern Iberian Studies Ana Mar铆a D铆az Burgos. He says neither of them had any reference point for a liberal arts college.
鈥淚n Puerto Rico and Colombia, where my wife is from, we only have large universities. Looking back, I would have appreciated this environment. I really enjoy the atmosphere here.鈥
Negr贸n initially set out to be a journalist as an undergrad. He still pursues journalistic writing by contributing a monthly column and op-ed pieces in Puerto Rico鈥檚 El Nuevo D铆a newspaper. He also brought his experience to a journalism course, 隆Stop the Presses! Journalism in the Spanish-Speaking World, that he taught in the Department of Hispanic Studies in fall 2016. In the class, students learned to write and produce their own opinion pieces and report on current affairs in Spanish, which they broadcast on WOBC, 91直播鈥檚 community radio station.
鈥淭he students were really engaged with it. It was a good way of having them read and develop critical analysis, then take it somewhere they can see results,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 love how impassioned 91直播 students are about everything. They arrive with high language proficiency. Those who don鈥檛 have the language skills learn very quickly. Even if Latin America is like a foreign universe to them, 91直播 students know enough history or politics to engage with it. Most of my classes have had really good conversations that I appreciate a lot.鈥
To maintain both his academic and writing careers, Negr贸n stays disciplined and creates a habit of sitting down to write, especially in the wee hours of the morning when the town is quiet.
鈥淓very day I try to put some time into academic writing and creative writing. I always have a journal with me. It鈥檚 not an easy balance, but I hope I can sustain it for the rest of my life because it makes me happy.鈥
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