{"id":11234,"date":"2020-04-04T17:55:59","date_gmt":"2020-04-04T16:55:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.themanchesterreview.co.uk\/?p=11234"},"modified":"2020-04-05T14:50:53","modified_gmt":"2020-04-05T13:50:53","slug":"natalie-scenters-zapico-limalim%cf%8cn-reviewed-by-ian-pople","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.themanchesterreview.co.uk\/?p=11234","title":{"rendered":"Natalie Scenters-Zapico | <em><strong>Lima::Lim\u03ccn<\/strong><\/em> | reviewed by Ian Pople"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Natalie Scenters-Zapico | <em>Lima::Lim\u03ccn<\/em> | Copper Canyon Press: $16.00<\/strong\n\n<img decoding=\"async\" style=\"margin-right: 10px;\" src=\"https:\/\/i.postimg.cc\/d3VwF06m\/9781556595318-FC-700px-wide-resize-460x690.jpg\" width=\"220\" align=\"left\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Natalie Scenters-Zapico\u2019s <em>Lima::Lim\u03ccn<\/em> is her second book of poetry; and it might be useful simply to quote the back cover blurb as a suitable introduction.  \u2018<em>Lima::Lim\u03ccn<\/em> fiercely questions machismo and marianismo, cultural norms that give way to gender violence and a blind eye turned to femicide.\u2019 Marianismo is, as we might gather from the word itself, the machismo view that women should be pure and virtuous, like the Virgin Mary herself.  And the blurb does, more or less, sum up much of the thematic concern of the book.  As we might note with the blurb\u2019s comment on \u2018femicide\u2019, that the book does not pull its punches.  <\/p>\n<p>One thing to notice, and which colours this review, is that while published by a major American poetry publisher, and aimed at the \u2018general\u2019 poetry reader, whoever that is, the book contains quite a daunting range of Spanish vocabulary.  However, the decision not to translate such terms, even in the notes, is vindicated by the way Scenters-Zapico uses them to lever up the carapace of machismo.  That Scenters-Zapico is choosing these words carefully is a given.  That she uses them within the grammar and the sentences of the poems to provide emotional fulcrums is less of a given; that she does so with such fierce skill is testament not only to the vehemence of her message but also to the technical acuity she clearly has. The Spanish vocabulary, and this from a completely non-Spanish speaker, offers a kind of oral valve from which pinpoints of emotional culture emerge to force the reader to attend.  <\/p>\n<p>To attend to what?  The epigraph to the book is the Spanish and an English translation of a poem by Conchita Piquer.  The epigraph begins by commenting that that children will sing a song, ironically called \u2018This sad little copla\u2019, which \u2018the wind takes \/ From the lemon to the lime\u2019 and finishes, \u2018What pain &#038; what shame, \/ the little neighbour girl from in front ended up single.\u2019  Thus, Scenters-Zapico shows from the opening page of the book that the girl is under huge social pressure to find a man, keep him and get married.  The woman is condemned from an early age. <\/p>\n<p>The opening poem that follows that epitaph is a highly ironic, erotic paean to a kind of female desire. \u2018I want to be the lemons in the bowl \/ on the cover of the magazine. I want \/ to be round, to be yellow, to be pulled \/\/ from branches.\u2019Lima Lim\u03ccn :: Infancia\u2019 A profound ambivalence seems to underpin these lines.  On the one hand, the text evinces a kind of desire that should be natural and right;  the word \u2018want\u2019 sits emphasised at the end of the line.  But then, there is that title \u2018Infancia\u2019 translated as anything from \u2018babyhood\u2019, through \u2018infancy\u2019 to \u2018childhood\u2019. And in the final verse, a sense of self-destruction imbues the writing, \u2018I want to corrode my husband\u2019s \/ wedding ring.  I want to be a lemon with my equator marked in black ink &#8211; \/ small dashes to show my shape: pitted and convex.\u2019  Desire has turned to a kind of self-mutilation which follows from the bitter corrosion of the man\u2019s connection to his own marriage. <\/p>\n<p>That irony and corrosion becomes explicit in the next poem, \u2018Neomachismo\u2019 which contains such prose verses as, \u2018\u012fAye pena penita pena! Listen to Lola Flores &#038; search for the pain between your eyes on WebMD.  Don\u2019t feel bad if you sob in one room while he reads about aporia in the next.\u2019 There\u2019s a wilful play in these lines which makes them even more striking.  It may not matter if the reader knows who Lola Flores is, but the reader\u2019s view is almost shunted from that particularised, named person out to WebMD;  a health website.  And then the bitter irony of the woman who sobs in one room, while her \u2018intellectual\u2019 man ironically reads Derrida on the gaps in \u2018text\u2019 in the next room!  <\/p>\n<p>It would be too easy to suggest that Scenters-Zapico has a range of targets, some of which are easier to hit than others.  That would be to suggest that the writer is caught up in the loop she seeks to break open;  the cyclical violence extended to women in Mexico.  It is clear that Scenters-Zapico is fully aware of the ways in which her subject matter might pull her in and down.  In the poem, \u2018Aesthetic Translation\u2019, Scenters-Zapico describes the work of Charles Bowden, who wrote, \u2018Femicide \u2026 was an hembra (female)\/ lie about machos \u2013 a myth.\/ Years later, Charles Bowden \/\/ would speak for Mexican women \/ of the violence of machos, \/ of femicide, for glossy magazines \/\/ far away.\u2019 Bowden is \u2018collector of violence \/ against hembras. He won\u2019t let women \/ speak.\u2019 The careful line breaks here emphasize the \u2018far away\u2019 and \u2018speak\u2019, the evasive negatives contained in both.  Scenters-Zapico\u2019s reportage here paints Bowden into a particular corner, a corner that, it is clear, if Scenters-Zapico is to be believed, Bowden deserves to be in.  <\/p>\n<p>Such closing down of debate would feel partial, at the very least, were it not that so much of the writing in this book is simply so vivid and truthful.  It is not simply the energy and anger that bursts through so much of the poetry, it is the completely lived-in feel that the poems evince. \u2018Aesthetic Translation\u2019 moves on to finish by describing the mourning doves gathered on lampposts, \u2018searching \/ for any pool of water to clean \/\/ their brown, pointed \/ beaks.  The mourning doves eat \/ loose change \/\/ on streets. The mourning doves open their wings &#038; clean the air \/\/ of the maquila\u2019s smog.  I breathe \/\/ deep, I breathe so deeply. I swear \/\/ I\u2019ve died. I swear I was born \/\/ dead again.\u2019  When Scenters-Zapico depicts the mourning doves, traditionally monogamous, she depicts not only the sense that nature is part of the witness to Bowden\u2019s lies and to femicide itself.  Nature in the form of the mourning doves is polluted in ways which are analogous, if not similar, to Bowden\u2019s pollution of the truth.  A maquila, by the way, is defined as \u2018a foreign-owned factory in Mexico which uses cheap Mexican labour to assemble products and then exports the products back to the country of origin\u2019. Scenters-Zapico\u2019s own final intervention shows the ultimate pollution of the female, where the breath of life itself is a kind of death. <\/p>\n<p><strong>by Ian Pople<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Natalie Scenters-Zapico | Lima::Lim\u03ccn | Copper Canyon Press: $16.00<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":21,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_is_tweetstorm":false,"jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":[]},"categories":[13,283],"tags":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v20.2.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Natalie Scenters-Zapico | Lima::Lim\u03ccn | reviewed by Ian Pople - The Manchester Review<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"http:\/\/www.themanchesterreview.co.uk\/?p=11234\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Natalie Scenters-Zapico | Lima::Lim\u03ccn | reviewed by Ian Pople - 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