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Rolling the R’s “Blame it on Chachi” R. Zamora Linmark
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Born in Manila, Philippines Educated at University of Hawaii Pursued a degree in Theatre Currently resides in San Francisco, CA
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His work has appeared in The Best Gay Fiction of 1997, Premonitions: The Kaya Anthology of Asian North American Poetry, and Charlie Chan Is Dead: An Anthology of Asian American Contemporary Fiction, edited by Jessica Hagedorn. Rolling the R's is his first novel.Premonitions: The Kaya Anthology of Asian North American Poetry
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Motivation Studied theatre because it allowed him to “exercise his text.” Found that theater did not offer texts that he could relate to, none written by Filipino- Americans, Filipinos, or even Asians.
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Learned that to become a writer, you have to be honest to the page, in order to write in a voice that is true to you.
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This is apparent in his narrative structures, his experiments in diction, and his way of shedding light on gay identity and assimilation, as shown in his novel, Rolling the R's.
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“While Linmark's personal identity, experiences, and beliefs are seen in his work, he finds fixed values constrain his writing, his role, and his identity as a writer. Rather, he does not focus on his history in order to allow himself to go into unexplored writing styles and ideas.” -Taken from “Magandamagazine” interview
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“I think identity is something I cannot avoid. My identities. I don’t think that any Filipinos have a single identity. I really believe that Filipinos, whether they are from here or from the Philippines have the ability to reinvent themselves... I really believe that identity is linked with language and that they work in a symbiotic relationship, that language shapes identity and identity reshapes language, a simultaneous operation working. For me, I use my identity as a springboard to get into this world that I am creating.” “I think identity is something I cannot avoid. My identities. I don’t think that any Filipinos have a single identity. I really believe that Filipinos, whether they are from here or from the Philippines have the ability to reinvent themselves... I really believe that identity is linked with language and that they work in a symbiotic relationship, that language shapes identity and identity reshapes language, a simultaneous operation working. For me, I use my identity as a springboard to get into this world that I am creating.”
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Information http://www.public.asu.edu/~dejesus/210e ntries/pama/http://www.public.asu.edu/~dejesus/210e ntries/pama/ http://www.kaya.com/rtrs-auth.html
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