{"id":10556,"date":"2020-02-12T09:54:11","date_gmt":"2020-02-12T09:54:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/revistaidees.cat\/yolanda-castano-quan-deixo-de-ser-flor-molesto\/"},"modified":"2020-03-06T19:09:33","modified_gmt":"2020-03-06T19:09:33","slug":"yolanda-castano-quan-deixo-de-ser-flor-molesto","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/revistaidees.cat\/en\/yolanda-castano-quan-deixo-de-ser-flor-molesto\/","title":{"rendered":"Yolanda Casta\u00f1o: When I\u2019m no longer a flower, I\u2019m annoying"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>Story of transformation<\/em> (original title: <em>Historia da transformaci\u00f3n<\/em>) talks about identity interwoven with a gender perspective, but also about the problems associated with the representation of that identity. Gender stereotypes linked to the traditional image of the woman writer, the expectations around her public projection and the public projection of women generally; what it means to grow and enter into a markedly patriarchal public arena and the reflection of ourselves that society shows us.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><br>STORY OF TRANSFORMATION<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">It began as disorder&nbsp;<br>hurtful restraint as a kid we were poor and had less than nothing&nbsp;<br>rickety indigence before I wanting grief&nbsp;<br>a parable of complexes a syndrome a ghost&nbsp;<br>(it is as dire to miss as it&nbsp;lament&nbsp;it)&nbsp;<br>Coral shadow shattering pearls.&nbsp;<br>It began as a slippery gill whose&nbsp;<br>passing breath left me destitute&nbsp;<br>The plainest face in the playground I matter&nbsp;<br>not a whit and I\u2019ll neither grow nor sow&nbsp;<br>you've got it or you don't renounce it comply swallow&nbsp;<br>a maelstrom raven sky of eternal cold&nbsp;judgement&nbsp;<br>a set westerly a private privation&nbsp;<br>(a nuns' runt like all the rest&nbsp;<br>each one a lesbian or anorexic&nbsp;<br>the letter bet into the blood the hands the head&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>the conscience the cunt).&nbsp;<br>I shut my eyes and hoped beyond hope&nbsp;<br>to become once and for all&nbsp;everything I was.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>But beauty corrupts. Beauty corrupts.&nbsp;<br>Coral shadow squandering pearls.&nbsp;<br>Day breaks conquering and there's boding in its gullet&nbsp;<br>You fool! bedevilled with box ticking&nbsp;<br>and not what they held inside.&nbsp;<br>It was an idle giddy burst of flowers in winter&nbsp;<br>The rivers leapt back to themselves in pink waterfalls&nbsp;<br>butterflies and snails born from my hair&nbsp;<br>The smile of my breasts fuelled airplanes&nbsp;<br>Beauty corrupts&nbsp;<br>Beauty corrupts&nbsp;<br>My supple belly guided by spring&nbsp;<br>whelks spilled over my tiny hands&nbsp;<br>high praise pinched my heart&nbsp;<br>and I didn\u2019t know what to do with all that light in all that shadow.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>They said: \"your weapon will be your punishment\"&nbsp;<br>they spat my virtues in my face in this&nbsp;<br>club we won't have girls with scarlet lips&nbsp;<br>a vicious tide of filth&nbsp;gaining interest&nbsp;<br>that has nothing to do with my mascara&nbsp;<br>the mice burrowed into my room and dirtied the linen drawers&nbsp;<br>litres of scrap pitch lurking secretly litres&nbsp;<br>of control litres of mud-slingers kilos of suspicion raised&nbsp;<br>with just the arc of my eyebrows you should be hog-tied&nbsp;<br>stained grey and all trace erased with acid&nbsp;<br>renounce who I am just to write?&nbsp;<br>they skinned me alive for my long tapering neck&nbsp;<br>for the hair that springs from the nape in this&nbsp;<br>club we won't have girls who strut&nbsp;<br>We do not trust summer&nbsp;<br>Beauty corrupts.&nbsp;<br>Make bloody sure it's worth it.<br><br><br>Original poem published at <em>De Profundidade de Campo<\/em> [<em>Profundidad de campo<\/em>] (Espiral Maior, 2007; ed. Biling., Visor 2009)<br><br><br><br><\/pre>\n\n\n\n<p>Demonstrating that feminist reflection cannot only centre the axes of meaning of poems but must also must impregnate them with cross-cutting subthemes, settings, similes and secondary elements as a perpetual background, that second verse particularly alludes to the eternal problem of the public representation of women: whilst half the population of the world suffers a terrible invisibility, those who want visibility are also made to pay for it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><br>POETRY IS A MINORITIZED LANGUAGE<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">I would start with its breadth. Acidity,&nbsp;pH.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>It&nbsp;walks like a woman:&nbsp;<br>between the massacre of the unseen&nbsp;<br>and the concentration camp of visibility.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>It bellows style and polish,&nbsp;<br>a neighbourly epic.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>In the poem, language&nbsp;<br>falls on its own deaf ears,&nbsp;<br>the words amplify&nbsp;<br>their circle of friends.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>You need to&nbsp;frig the alphabet&nbsp;<br>till it spouts&nbsp;<br>unlikely links&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>The changing gears of chatter,&nbsp;<br>the tell of another order.&nbsp;<br>The mosquito\u2019s smile in the amber.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>It\u2019s not that you don't get Arabic.&nbsp;<br>You&nbsp;don\u2019t&nbsp;get&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>poetry.<br><br><br>Original poem published at <em>De A Segunda Lingua<\/em> [<em>La segunda lengua<\/em>] (PEN Club de Galicia \u2013 Fundaci\u00f3n Abanca 2014; ed biling, Visor 2014)<br><br><br><br><\/pre>\n\n\n\n<p>The context of this poem tries to transcend romantic love, the stereotypes of undying matrimonial love, the negation of women\u2019s desire and all the social, religious and other constructs that surround women\u2019s faithfulness. At the same time, it tries to break with a dual heteropatriarchal world and with all the social stereotypes that have been built on that world.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><br>THE UNDERLINING IS NOT MINE <\/h5>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">I didn't say pink, nor blue,&nbsp;<br>don't put those in&nbsp;my mouth.&nbsp;<br>I didn't say&nbsp;<em>the interior remains closed<\/em>,&nbsp;<br>nor did I toast for us to want all that we should.&nbsp;<br>I didn't promise to be able to manage the disaster,&nbsp;<br>nor did I say that certain words&nbsp;<br>elude me like dragonflies.&nbsp;<br>I didn't say&nbsp;<em>I need you<\/em>, I didn't invoke&nbsp;Providences,&nbsp;<br>not a single one of God's hundred names&nbsp;<br>came to rest upon my lips.&nbsp;<br>Don't put in my mouth&nbsp;<br>words of&nbsp;<em>forever<\/em>,&nbsp;<br>nor that my last complexes&nbsp;<br>have leapt from me like fleas.&nbsp;<br>I didn't say fatherland nor motherland,&nbsp;<br>don't put those words in my&nbsp;mouth.&nbsp;<br>I didn't say&nbsp;<em>marry me<\/em>, nor&nbsp;<br><em>I'm going to file down my life until it fits into these spaces.<\/em>&nbsp;<br>It must not have been me who rhymed destiny with desire.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>Don't put those in my mouth.&nbsp;<br>Put that&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>other thing&nbsp;<br>instead.&nbsp;<br><br><br>Translation into English by Keith Payne<br>Original poem published at <em>De A Segunda Lingua<\/em> [<em>La segunda lengua<\/em>] (PEN Club \u2013 Fundaci\u00f3n Abanca 2014; ed biling, Visor, 2014)<br><br><br><br><\/pre>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><br>B<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>This poem returns to questions we have already touched on about gender stereotypes and gender roles that are imposed on women when they step onto the public stage. About how difficult it is to build an identity in the margins of the constructs that are projected on us by the patriarchy, with all our intrinsically human doubts, discomfort and contradictions. The text speaks with a certain irony of all those expectations that we lay on ourselves.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">When I\u2019m no longer a flower,&nbsp;<br>I\u2019m annoying.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>But the hard thing was to be,&nbsp;<br>inexhaustibly upsetting.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>Getting seriously ill&nbsp;<br>would hugely benefit my literary renown.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>If I don\u2019t get a job, I\u2019ll leave for Las Vegas.&nbsp;<br>In the States I\u2019m more gorgeous than anywhere else.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>But I have been rude and pretentious,&nbsp;<br>I\u2019ve smiled only for my self-interest,&nbsp;<br>the hectic sexy capitalist;&nbsp;<br>I made it compensate for my days&nbsp;of powerlessness.&nbsp;<br>To be&nbsp;<br>is the hard thing.&nbsp;<br>When I spoke, only my lips were contemplated.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>If I take a break, would that&nbsp;<br>make me irresponsible?&nbsp;<br>If I\u2019m vulnerable,&nbsp;<br>will I be trod on?&nbsp;<br>If things didn\u2019t look so good for me,&nbsp;<br>would I be loved better?&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>A&nbsp;profuse razor the identity project,&nbsp;<br>a mechanic nightingale the evening.&nbsp;<br>So many souvenirs will be the end of Notre Dame\u2019s&nbsp;<br>Where were you when I needed you?<br><br><br>Translation into English by Lawrence Schimel<br>Original poem published at <em>De Profundidade de Campo<\/em> [<em>Profundidad de campo<\/em>] (Espiral Maior, 2007; ed. Biling., Visor 2009)<br><\/pre>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Story of transformation (original title: Historia da transformaci\u00f3n) talks about identity interwoven with a gender perspective, but also about the problems associated with the representation of that identity. Gender stereotypes linked to the traditional image of the woman writer, the expectations around her public projection and the public projection of women generally; what it means to grow and enter into a markedly patriarchal public arena and the reflection of ourselves that society shows us. STORY OF TRANSFORMATION It began as disorder&nbsp;hurtful restraint as a kid we were poor and had less than nothing&nbsp;rickety indigence before I wanting grief&nbsp;a parable of\u2026<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":9599,"parent":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[201],"tags":[],"segment":[],"subject":[],"class_list":["post-10556","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-anthology-of-feminist-poetry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Yolanda Casta\u00f1o: When I\u2019m no longer a flower, I\u2019m annoying &#8211; IDEES<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/revistaidees.cat\/en\/yolanda-castano-quan-deixo-de-ser-flor-molesto\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Yolanda Casta\u00f1o: When I\u2019m no longer a flower, I\u2019m annoying &#8211; IDEES\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Story of transformation (original title: Historia da transformaci\u00f3n) talks about identity interwoven with a gender perspective, but also about the problems associated with the representation of that identity. 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Gender stereotypes linked to the traditional image of the woman writer, the expectations around her public projection and the public projection of women generally; what it means to grow and enter into a markedly patriarchal public arena and the reflection of ourselves that society shows us. 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