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Yale
Daily News
Published
Thursday, October 9, 2003
Troncoso
teaches
Contributing
Reporter
|
Chicano author Sergio Troncoso has contemplated his
heritage for a long time.
"Don't express Latino pride by simply waving a flag,"
Troncoso said. "Ask yourself, 'What should Latinos be?'"
Troncoso, the author of critically-acclaimed works such as "The
Last Tortilla and Other Stories" and "The Nature of Truth," has
spent most of his life searching for an answer to that question. He emphasized
Latino empowerment when he spoke to students at La Casa Cultural Wednesday
night.
Born in El Paso, Tex. to Mexican immigrants, Troncoso was raised in
Ysleta, a small, rural community in the eastern outskirts of El Paso where
running water and electricity were scarce. After graduating from Ysleta High
School, Troncoso left for the East Coast and Harvard.
"I went through a lot of cultural adjustment when I first arrived
at Harvard," Troncoso said. "I grew up in a place where Latinos were
the majority. At Harvard, I found myself to be brown against a white background
for the first time in my life."
Although Troncoso characterized his first year at Harvard as
"lonely" and "difficult," he said he eventually found his
niche and became acclimated to the heavy workload, ultimately majoring in
economics and political science.
Troncoso said his interest in international relations was fueled by his
desire to learn more about his Mexican heritage.
"I grew up near Mexico, and my parents were Mexican, but I
realized I didn't know anything about Mexican history, so I went to Harvard to
learn about it," Troncoso said.
Troncoso said his desire to learn Mexican history was satisfied upon
graduating from Harvard, but the question of whether he was Mexicano
or Latino remained. Troncoso said he spent a year in Mexico City on a Fulbright
scholarship to answer this question, and arrived home with a newfound desire to
study philosophy and literature.
The philosophical teachings of Nietzsche, Plato and Aristotle are
prevalent in Troncoso's latest work, "The Nature of Truth," which was
published in 2003 and is set at Yale. Troncoso said the novel is a contemporary
re-examination of the issues of redemption and truth that are expressed in
Dostoevsky's "Crime and Punishment."
"I wanted to write a novel that centered upon the pursuit of
truth, and one that is critical of the Christian and European inheritance that
Harvard and Yale students are taught," Troncoso said.
Troncoso said the novel also focuses on the questions of self-identity
posed by the protagonist, Helmut Sanchez, who is of half-German, half-Mexican
descent.
"Helmut is forced to ask himself [throughout the course of the
novel] what his role is as a Chicano/Latino," Troncoso said.
Troncoso said he hopes his novels -- which delve into philosophical and
social issues -- will help break down the stereotypes surrounding Chicano
literature.
"Chicano literature is separated into two categories -- 'familia' stories and 'barrio' stories,'" Troncoso
said. "I want to bring intellectualism to Chicano literature. Chicanos
should be capable of 'idea novels.'"
Daniel Martinez '05 praised Troncoso's attempts to overcome literary
barriers.
"I'm proud to see [Troncoso] making it at a national level, and
reaching an audience that's more broad than just Chicanos," Martinez said.
Irma Mejia '06, a staff member at La Casa, said she was inspired by
Troncoso's example of success in spite of his humble origins and initial
sentiments of inadequacy at Harvard.
"It's reassuring to see someone who has gone through the same
trials and tribulations that I'm going through as a minority at Yale,"
Mejia said. "The talk was empowering. [Troncoso] demonstrated that these
are normal feelings that I can overcome."
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