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Horticulture 2023 Newsletter No. 36 

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https://hnr.k-state.edu/extension/info-center/newsletters/index.html

Blog Post: http://www.ksuhortnewsletter.org

Video of the Week: Cuttings to Grow Inside for the Winter
https://kansashealthyyards.org/all-videos/video/cuttings-to-grow-inside-for-winter

REMINDERS
•     Fertilize cool-season lawn (Kentucky bluegrass or tall fescue) if haven’t done so yet.
•     Dig gladiolus when foliage begins to yellow and air dry before storing.
•     Buy spring-flowering bulbs while selection is good. Plant in late September through October

TURFGRASS
Lawn Seeding Timing
Although September is typically the preferred month to reseed cool-season lawns, such as tall fescue and Kentucky bluegrass, with the heat we have been experiencing throughout the state, postponing may be a good idea. When temperatures are elevated as they have been recently, newly-planted seeds need additional water. Homeowners who put down seed during the heat may find themselves watering several times a day. By middle to late September, we should have relief from triple digits allowing homeowners time to re-seed.
Our usual recommendation is don’t plant Kentucky bluegrass past early October. However, you can get by with an early to mid-October planting for tall fescue. October 15 is generally considered the last day for safely planting or overseeding a tall fescue lawn in the fall. With a late seeding, take special care not to allow plants to dry out. Anything that slows growth will make it less likely that plants will mature enough to survive the winter.
Seeding after the cut-off date can work, but the success rate goes down the later the planting date. Late plantings often fail as a result of poorly rooted plants being heaved from the soil after repeated freezing and thawing. Roots are then exposed and quickly dry out. Help the seedlings establish a healthy root system prior to freezing weather by keeping them well-watered. See the August 29th newsletter for information on how to seed or overseed a lawn. (Cynthia Domenghini)

VEGETABLES
Harvesting Sweet Potatoes
Cold soil negatively affects the quality of sweet potatoes in taste and shelf-life. To prevent this, harvest prior to the first fall freeze. Sweet potatoes are typically ready for harvest three to four months after planting. Gently unearth the sweet potatoes in one mound to check for readiness. You may also notice die-back of the above ground growth as harvest time approaches.
After digging, sweet potatoes need to be cured for several days. This process increases the shelf-life and flavor of the sweet potatoes. Curing should be done in a warm, humid location. Ideally the temperature should be between 85- and 90-degrees F with a relative humidity between 85 and 95%.
Store sweet potatoes for several weeks before consuming. During this time starches are converting to sugars which improves the flavor. Protect sweet potatoes during storage by keeping temperatures above 55 degrees F. (Cynthia Domenghini)

Vegetable Crop Rotation
Crop rotation is the recommended practice of changing the location of plants within the same family each growing season. Plants within the same family are often susceptible to similar pests. They also have similar nutrient requirements. By planting crop families in different areas of the garden each season, a common host plant is removed. Pests that overwinter in the soil or debris are not able to continue their life cycle which prevents the population from growing exponentially. Additionally, the varied root system depths and nutrient requirements prevents nutrient depletion in the soil. Often, cabbage, peas, lettuce, onions and other cool-season crops have more shallow roots. Warm-season crops tend to have a more extensive root system.
To plan your crop rotation draw a diagram of your vegetable garden now while you remember where everything is. Next year, as you making your planting plan, reference this sketch and alternate locations for each plant family. For example, in the area where you have tomatoes this year avoid planting anything from the Solanacaeae family (eggplant, pepper, potato) next year. If you planted bush beans this year, be sure to avoid planting anything from the fabaceae family (lima beans, peas, pole beans, etc.) in the same location next year. (Cynthia Domenghini)

ORNAMENTALS
Ornamental Sweet Potatoes
Ornamental sweet potatoes are mostly valued for their attractive foliage as it drapes down the sides of containers and spreads over the ground within planters. As with other ornamental vegetable varieties, though ornamental sweet potatoes are edible, they are grown for their aesthetic value. Consequently, the flavor quality of ornamental varieties is often lacking. In the case of ornamental sweet potatoes, the tuberous roots are much more bitter than the edible counterpart. If you choose to consume them, follow the curing instructions in this newsletter.
Ornamental sweet potatoes can be overwintered by digging them just before the first frost and storing until it’s safe to plant in the spring. Remove the above ground growth and keep the roots in moist peat moss in a cool, dark room. Alternatively, the entire plant can be moved indoors and kept as a houseplant during the winter. Check the plant first for signs of disease or pests. Cut the vines back to about one-foot and carefully transplant into the desired container. Keep the plant in a space with plenty of natural light until warmer weather returns in the spring.
(Cynthia Domenghini)

MISCELLANEOUS
Garden Spiders
Though some consider spiders to be unwelcomed, they are a valuable resource for pest control.
The yellow garden spider is commonly found in our Kansas gardens. The body is one-inch long and has yellow markings on the dark-colored abdomen. Legs of the garden spider are black with a yellow or reddish band.
The banded garden spider is similar in size with yellow and white bands marking the legs and abdomen. The legs have black and orange bands.
These two varieties of spiders are types of orb weavers and construct large, circular webs often in bushes, tall grasses and other areas with high insect populations. These spiders are not dangerous to humans and should be left alone to allow them to continue feeding on pests in the garden. (Cynthia Domenghini)

Lacebugs
Description: Adults are 1/8 to 1/3-inch long with lace-like wings. Their bodies are lightly colored and have dark markings. Nymphs do not have wings, are darker than adults and have an oval-shaped body. Nymphs leave behind exoskeletons when they molt. These can be seen attached to plant foliage. Small, dark droppings are deposited on undersides of leaves by adults and nymphs. Eggs are small and black and can also be found on the underside of leaves.
Life Cycle: Lacebugs have two generations each year. Adults overwinter under tree bark or in plant debris on the ground. As plants leaf out in the spring the adults begin feeding and lay eggs which hatch within two weeks. The nymphs feed for several weeks as they molt and grow into adults. Eggs laid from this generation of adults mature and feed through summer and into fall.
Damage: Lacebug damage is often seen on oak and sycamore trees in our area. Some other hosts include: hawthorn, pyracantha and cotoneaster. Adults feed on leaves using a piercing mouthpart. This creates a stippled look on the leaf which can result in discoloration and premature drop if the infestation is heavy.
Control: Control measures are not recommended as we prepare for fall. Trees and shrubs have adequately stored food for the winter so lacebugs will not negatively affect an otherwise healthy tree/shrub at this point in the season. (Cynthia Domenghini)

Contributors:
Cynthia Domenghini, Instructor
Ward Upham, Extension Associate

Division of Horticulture
1712 Claflin, 2021 Throckmorton
Manhattan, KS 66506
(785) 532-6173

For questions or further information, contact: [email protected] OR [email protected]
This newsletter is also available on the World Wide Web at:
http://hnr.k-state.edu/extension/info-center/newsletters/index.html
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K-State Research and Extension is committed to making its services, activities and programs accessible to all participants. If you have special requirements due to a physical, vision or hearing disability, or a dietary restriction please contact Extension Horticulture at (785) 532-6173.

Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service K-State Research and Extension is an equal opportunity employer. Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension Work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, as amended. Kansas State University, County Extension Councils, and United States Department of Agriculture Cooperating, Ernie Minton, Dean.

 

KU News: Author seeks literature of a Latino heartland

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman
Author seeks literature of a Latino heartland

LAWRENCE – When did Latinos start to imagine the Midwest as a possible homeland? When Tejano cowboys drove their cattle to market in early 20th century Kansas City? When bracero migrant workers arrived during World War II and continued coming in the postwar era?

Those are two possible answers postulated by Marta Caminero-Santangelo, University of Kansas Distinguished Professor of English, in her new article “Imagining a Latino Heartland: Migrant Placemaking, Corridos of the Midwest, and Tomás Rivera” in the journal MELUS (Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States).

“This article is part of a book project I’m working on called ‘Imagining a Latino Heartland,’” Caminero-Santangelo said. “In literary scholarship, there’s been almost no attention paid to Latino literature in the Midwest or about the Midwest. It creates the impression that there is no Latino literary cultural production in the Midwest and that Latinos themselves have not been here at all, or not for a long time.

“The idea was to find some early cultural production establishing Latino presence in the Midwest and giving some sense of how Latinos were imagining the so-called heartland, and whether they were building a relationship to it — even in imagination.”

Caminero-Santangelo turned to “The Harvest,” a posthumously published (1992) and lesser-known collection of writings by Rivera, whom she called “one of the forefathers of Chicano literature. His canonical text about migrant farmworkers is called ‘And the Earth Did Not Devour Him.’”

In an essay titled “The Great Plains as Refuge in Chicano Literature,” it was Rivera who turned to corridos — folk ballads — from an earlier era for inspiration.

Caminero-Santangelo examines two corridos — The “Corrido de Kiansis” and “Los reenganchados a Kansas” — for signs of any feelings of attachment the migrant workers might have for the place. She finds herself less convinced than Rivera.

“Rivera does a little bit of flip-flopping and hedging in general,” Caminero-Santangelo said. “He is trying to open up a space where the corridos imagined Kansas in a positive way because he’s trying in that essay to claim a tradition of Mexican American cultural production that actually was positive about the Great Plains. And when I looked at the corridos that Rivera looked at, I thought he was stretching it a bit, and that they were not nearly as positive as he laid out. So that’s my revisionism of Rivera.”

Caminero-Santangelo noted that by the time of his death in 1984, Rivera was imagining a Latino homeland in the Midwest.

“It was a rare instance of seeing a classic, very well-known early writer imagining the Midwest as a potential home,” she said. “Part of the book project is really playing with these terms, homeland and heartland, and when do writers start to think that the heartland can be a potential homeland, or even a place of the heart, a place where familial relations and communal relations are located … which gets to the bigger issue of placemaking.”

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KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

Equestrian Club At Kansas State University Sponsoring Regional Intercollegiate Horse Show

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The IHSA (Intercollegiate Horse Show Association) Club at Kansas State University is sponsoring a regional horse show September 16-17 at Vermillion Valley Equestrian Center, Belvue, Kansas.
This will be the first show hosted by the Wildcats since the athletic department dissolved the equestrian team in 2014.
“We are excited to welcome students from 13 universities from the Midwest to this competition,” said Ann White, hunt seat (English) team coach.
“Entries are not yet complete, but we are expecting about 100 participants,” White commented.
Riders will draw a horse provided by the KSU host and enter the arena without any warmup. Classes start with introductory walk trot and go through advanced levels with jumping.
Last year, the KSU English team went undefeated in this region and advanced to zones and nationals.
“I am looking forward to another successful year. We have a lot of promising riders,” Coach White said.
“The mission of IHSA is to provide equestrian competition for all college and university students regardless of riding level, gender, race, sexual orientation, or financial status,” White explained. “The IHSA is dedicated to promoting sportsmanship, horsemanship, and academic excellence.”
With more than 60 members (and growing), the IHSA club at KSU has students who have never been around horses through those who have competed at a national level.
“Our club membership has the option to join the competition teams,” Coach White said. “But a student does not have to compete to be part of the club. Team members have more financial and time commitments.”
The club has educational seminars, clinics, guest speakers, social events, and fund raisers which involve equine as a focus.
“We also have a Western team coached by Sarah Mattocks. That competition offers introductory riding through advanced ranch riding,” White informed. Several students participate on both teams.
White and Mattocks volunteer their time to serve as team coaches and club advisors.
The KSU IHSA team is self-funded, and the students must pay for their ride times, White pointed out. Horses are provided by the Vermillion Valley Equine Center which is located 30 miles from campus.
“The team is lobbying that as Kansas State University expands their equine facilities and equine curriculum, they will provide support and opportunity for this club to exist on campus as the rodeo club does,” White said.
“The IHSA is a huge recruiting tool across the country and the team at KSU is hoping that the administration will take notice, consider them as such,” Coach White commented.
“It is really eye opening to travel all over the country to other schools and see the support of their equine activities and incorporation of their teams,” White observed. “While we are part of a big agricultural university with a well-known animal science department, our riders have to travel off campus and totally fund themselves.”
The IHSA club continues looking for fund raising opportunities and sponsorships.
Additional information about KSU’s IHSA team is available at ihsaatkansasstate.com, with more Intercollegiate Horse Show Association details at ihsainc.com.
Vermillion Valley Equine Center facts are at vermillionvalleyequine.com.
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CUTLINES
Vermillion Valley Equine Center (VVEC) near Belvue will host a regional IHSA (Intercollegiate Horse Show Association) show September 16-17, sponsored by the IHSA Club at KSU.
The Intercollegiate Horse Show Association (IHSA) Hunt Seat Team at KSU has won regional championships the past four years.

KU News: Study shows food from tobacco-owned brands more ‘hyperpalatable’ than competitors’ food

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Study shows food from tobacco-owned brands more ‘hyperpalatable’ than competitors’ food
LAWRENCE — An investigator at the University of Kansas has conducted research showing food brands owned by tobacco companies — which invested heavily into the U.S. food industry in the 1980s — appear to have “selectively disseminated hyperpalatable foods” to American consumers. “Hyperpalatable” foods are those featuring purposely tempting combinations of salts, fats and sugars. The study was published today in the peer-reviewed journal Addiction.

Reliance on student punishment in schools needs reconsideration, article argues
LAWRENCE — Schools and prisons share many similarities: authoritarian structure, emphasis on silence and order, schedules to follow, rules not to break. The parallels are the subject of a University of Kansas scholar’s new article published in the Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics. “Teachers and administrators need to discontinue the relationship between punishment and education and begin to create environments where students can thrive in nonpunitive ways,” said author Nikia Robert, assistant professor of religious studies.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch
Study shows food from tobacco-owned brands more ‘hyperpalatable’ than competitors’ food
LAWRENCE — Many of us know all too well the addictive nature of a big portion of food in the United States — most call it “junk food.” In fact, this kind of salty, sweet and high-fat fare makes up the lion’s share of what’s marketed to Americans.
Researchers employ a more scholarly term for food items featuring purposely tempting combinations of salts, fats and sugars: They’re “hyperpalatable.”
Now, an investigator at the University of Kansas has conducted research showing food brands owned by tobacco companies — which invested heavily into the U.S. food industry in the 1980s — appear to have “selectively disseminated hyperpalatable foods” to American consumers.
The study was published today in the peer-reviewed journal Addiction.

“We used multiple sources of data to examine the question, ‘In what ways were U.S. tobacco companies involved in the promotion and spread of hyperpalatable food into our food system?’” said lead author Tera Fazzino, assistant professor of psychology at KU and associate director of the Cofrin Logan Center for Addiction Research and Treatment at the KU Life Span Institute. “Hyperpalatable foods can be irresistible and difficult to stop eating. They have combinations of palatability-related nutrients, specifically fat, sugar, sodium or other carbohydrates that occur in combinations together.”
Fazzino’s previous work has shown today that 68% of the American food supply is hyperpalatable.
“These combinations of nutrients provide a really enhanced eating experience and make them difficult to stop eating,” she said. “These effects are different than if you just had something high in fat but had no sugar, salt or other type of refined carbohydrate.”
Fazzino and her co-authors found between 1988 and 2001, tobacco-owned foods were 29% more likely to be classified as fat-and-sodium hyperpalatable and 80% more likely to be classified as carbohydrate-and-sodium hyperpalatable than foods that were not tobacco-owned.
The KU researchers used data from a public repository of internal tobacco industry documents to determine ownership of food companies, then combed nutrition data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture in longitudinal analyses to estimate how much foods were “formulated to be hyperpalatable, based on tobacco ownership.”
“The question about their intent —we can’t really say from this data,” Fazzino said. “But what we can say is there’s evidence to indicate tobacco companies were consistently involved with owning and developing hyperpalatable foods during the time that they were leading our food system. Their involvement was selective in nature and different from the companies that didn’t have a parent tobacco-company ownership.”
Fazzino’s co-authors were KU doctoral students Daiil Jun and Kayla Bjorlie, along with Lynn Chollet Hinton, assistant professor of biostatistics and data science at KU Medical Center.
The KU researchers said they built their investigation inspired by earlier work by Laura Schmidt at the University of California-San Francisco.
“She and her team established that the same tobacco companies were involved in the development and heavy marketing of sugary drinks to kids — that was R.J. Reynolds — and that Philip Morris was involved in the direct transfer of tobacco marketing strategies targeting racial and ethnic minority communities in the U.S. to sell their food products,” Fazzino said.
While tobacco companies divested from the U.S. food system between the early to mid-2000s, perhaps the shadow of Big Tobacco has remained. The new KU study finds the availability of fat-and-sodium hyperpalatable foods (more than 57%) and carbohydrate-and-sodium hyperpalatable foods (more than 17%) was still high in 2018, regardless of prior tobacco ownership, showing these foods have become mainstays of the American diet.
“The majority of what’s out there in our food supply falls under the hyperpalatable category,” Fazzino said. “It’s actually a bit difficult to track down food that’s not hyperpalatable. In our day-to-day lives, the foods we’re surrounded by and can easily grab are mostly the hyperpalatable ones. And foods that are not hyperpalatable, such as fresh fruits and vegetables – they’re not just hard to find, they’re also more expensive. We don’t really have many choices when it comes to picking between foods that are fresh and enjoyable to eat (e.g., a crisp apple) and foods that you just can’t stop eating.”
Fazzino said using metrics of hyperpalatability could be one way to regulate formulations of food that are engineered to induce sustained eating.
“These foods have combinations of ingredients that create effects you don’t get when you eat those ingredients separately,” the KU researcher said. “And guess what? These combinations don’t really exist in nature, so our bodies aren’t ready to handle them. They can excessively trigger our brain’s reward system and disrupt our fullness signals, which is why they’re difficult to resist.”
As a result, consumers of hyperpalatable foods are more prone to obesity and related health consequences, even when they don’t intend to overeat.
“These foods may be designed to make you eat more than you planned,” Fazzino said. “It’s not just about personal choice and watching what you eat – they can kind of trick your body into eating more than you actually want.”
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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.
Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
Reliance on student punishment in schools needs reconsideration, article argues
LAWRENCE — Schools and prisons share many similarities: authoritarian structure, emphasis on silence and order, schedules to follow, rules not to break.
“Teachers and administrators need to discontinue the relationship between punishment and education and begin to create environments where students can thrive in nonpunitive ways,” said Nikia Robert, assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas.
Her article titled “An Ethic of Abolition: Becoming Educational Sanctuaries” addresses the uncanny resemblance between the educational/industrial complex and the U.S. carceral state. Both employ policies, pedagogies and practices to respond punitively to com¬munal transgressions. In response, Robert offers an abolitionist theological ethic to create educational sanctuaries. It appears in the Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics.
“We use punishment to scare people into obedience,” Robert said. “But what you produce are robots, not sentient beings with critical thinking who are accountable and aware of how their actions may harm others. As a professor, I’m always looking for transformative ways to build work ethic and curiosity, so students aren’t motivated to produce simply based on their fear of being punished.”
Robert also argues how students in underrepresented groups — ranging from pre-K to postsecondary institutions — become particularly vulnerable when punishment is used to “perpetuate anti-Blackness, patriarchy and other social inequities.” This in many ways mirrors the carceral system, she said.
The educator became further mindful of the similarities found in schools and prisons when teaching an Inside-Out course at a state prison.
“When you look at the yard versus a college campus, it appears very similar,” she said.
Her course was called “Prisons, Punishment and Redemption,” taught at the California Institution for Women in Chino.
“A lot of the women there were lifers,” she said. “It was a really meaningful course for them and for me. I hope to bring something like it here to Kansas — we certainly have plenty of prisons.”
Robert said that schools are not doing enough to make a distinction between a classroom and a jail cell.
“We’re here as educators wanting to create sanctuaries so that students can thrive as whole beings. We don’t want these kinds of docile, empty people who are afraid of consequences,” she said.
“We can start by looking at more equitable grading strategies. Using rubrics, using more marginal comments, allowing students to have retakes. So in other words, moving away from this rigid and punitive model and doing more to cultivate the whole student.”
As her article notes, Robert maintains a personal connection to this topic. Her daughter currently attends a K-8 private school in California.
“She’s been so deeply affected by the detention system,” Robert said. “So much so that if it was cold and she didn’t have a hat or coat that conform to their uniform policy, she would risk her own health rather than violate the policy out of fear of getting detention. I could not convince her otherwise because my daughter is a rule-follower.”
Since that situation emerged, Robert has been working with the school to put an end to detention.
“Why would an educational institution have detention? That’s something you find in a prison,” she said. “Surely, we can be more creative and spend more effort to think of ways to respond to harms, other than just saying, ‘Go to detention!’”
A New York native, Robert just began her first semester at KU. She is also executive director of Abolitionist Sanctuary, a “national faith-based coalition united against the moral crisis of mass incarceration and the criminalization of impoverished Black motherhood.” Her research focuses on ethics.
Robert continues to explore ways of replacing punishment in educational settings with something more effective and humane. Noting KU’s “rich legacy of racial integration in sports that coincides with an impactful history in the town of Lawrence and abolitionist movements,” she hopes to build a course, and possibly a conference, which connects the university with local community organizers in order to double-down on the commitment to building abolitionist sanctuaries in education.
“Punishment is just the easy way out. But to get to the root problem requires creativity. It requires community. How do we come together and think about solutions so that we can repair the harms, restore the relationships and rebuild a more just and equitable system where everyone can thrive?” she said.
“I don’t think prisons are fixable, but I hope schools are.”
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KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

KU News: Author seeks literature of a Latino heartland

0

From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman
Author seeks literature of a Latino heartland

LAWRENCE – When did Latinos start to imagine the Midwest as a possible homeland? When Tejano cowboys drove their cattle to market in early 20th century Kansas City? When bracero migrant workers arrived during World War II and continued coming in the postwar era?

Those are two possible answers postulated by Marta Caminero-Santangelo, University of Kansas Distinguished Professor of English, in her new article “Imagining a Latino Heartland: Migrant Placemaking, Corridos of the Midwest, and Tomás Rivera” in the journal MELUS (Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States).

“This article is part of a book project I’m working on called ‘Imagining a Latino Heartland,’” Caminero-Santangelo said. “In literary scholarship, there’s been almost no attention paid to Latino literature in the Midwest or about the Midwest. It creates the impression that there is no Latino literary cultural production in the Midwest and that Latinos themselves have not been here at all, or not for a long time.

“The idea was to find some early cultural production establishing Latino presence in the Midwest and giving some sense of how Latinos were imagining the so-called heartland, and whether they were building a relationship to it — even in imagination.”

Caminero-Santangelo turned to “The Harvest,” a posthumously published (1992) and lesser-known collection of writings by Rivera, whom she called “one of the forefathers of Chicano literature. His canonical text about migrant farmworkers is called ‘And the Earth Did Not Devour Him.’”

In an essay titled “The Great Plains as Refuge in Chicano Literature,” it was Rivera who turned to corridos — folk ballads — from an earlier era for inspiration.

Caminero-Santangelo examines two corridos — The “Corrido de Kiansis” and “Los reenganchados a Kansas” — for signs of any feelings of attachment the migrant workers might have for the place. She finds herself less convinced than Rivera.

“Rivera does a little bit of flip-flopping and hedging in general,” Caminero-Santangelo said. “He is trying to open up a space where the corridos imagined Kansas in a positive way because he’s trying in that essay to claim a tradition of Mexican American cultural production that actually was positive about the Great Plains. And when I looked at the corridos that Rivera looked at, I thought he was stretching it a bit, and that they were not nearly as positive as he laid out. So that’s my revisionism of Rivera.”

Caminero-Santangelo noted that by the time of his death in 1984, Rivera was imagining a Latino homeland in the Midwest.

“It was a rare instance of seeing a classic, very well-known early writer imagining the Midwest as a potential home,” she said. “Part of the book project is really playing with these terms, homeland and heartland, and when do writers start to think that the heartland can be a potential homeland, or even a place of the heart, a place where familial relations and communal relations are located … which gets to the bigger issue of placemaking.”

-30-
————————————————————————

KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs