cover of episode Luis Alberto Urrea — On Our Belonging to Each Other

Luis Alberto Urrea — On Our Belonging to Each Other

2024/6/20
logo of podcast On Being with Krista Tippett

On Being with Krista Tippett

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Shownotes Transcript

We humans have this drive to erect barriers between ourselves and others, Luis Alberto Urrea says, and yet this makes us a little crazy. He is an exuberant, wise, and refreshing companion into the deep meaning and the problem of borders — what they are really about, what we do with them, and what they do to us. 

The Mexican-American border was as close and personal to him as it could be when he was growing up — an apt expression of his parents’ turbulent Mexican-American divorce. In his writing and in this conversation, he complicates every dehumanizing stereotype of Mexicans, "migrants" — and border guards. A deep truth of our time, Luis insists, is that “we miss each other.” He offers a vision of the larger possibility of our time beyond the terrible tangles of today: that we might evolve the old illusion of the melting pot into a 21st-century richness of “us." And he delightfully models that messiness and humor will be required.

Luis Alberto Urrea is a distinguished professor of creative writing at the University of Illinois Chicago. His books of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction include Into the Beautiful North), The Devil’s Highway), The Hummingbird’s Daughter)*, *and Goodnight, Irene).

Find the transcript) for this show at onbeing.org.

This show originally aired in July 2018.


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