When Giving is All We Have

Alberto Ríos

17 pages 34-minute read

Alberto Ríos

When Giving is All We Have

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 2014

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Background

Cultural Context: Transborder Literature

In highlighting the importance of transcending boundaries and fusing artificial divisions into a new community, Rios’s poem is an example of transborder literature. 


Unlike immigrant literature that examines the dynamics of assimilation—how one cultural identity surrenders to and is lost within the adopted culture—transborder literature focuses on the challenge of two cultures existing simultaneously. In transborder works, individuals wrestle with being both and neither. 


Rios, raised in a first-generation Mexican immigrant family along the Mexico–US border, writes often about the internal challenges facing those immigrants who maintain close ties geographically and culturally with Mexico while trying to establish an identity in their adopted country, as well as the external dark pressures of xenophobia and bigotry. 


Mexican American transborder themes date back to the literature of the late-19th-century Gilded Age, as the US wrestled with the political ramifications of its contested border with Mexico. 


More recently, poets Natalee Diaz and Juan Felipe Herrera, journalists Charles Bowden and Sam Quinones, and novelists Denise Chaves and Leslie Marmon Silko have used transborder literature to explore the contemporary effects of this cultural tension. Rios’s 2015 collection A Small Story about the Sky, in which “When Giving Is All We Have” appears, is regarded as a landmark work of 21st century transborder literature. In its cycle of interrelated poems, Rios speaks to his own experiences growing up in Nogales and to larger existential issues raised by the transborder experience, including identity, belonging, and the virtue of empathy.

Literary Context: Wisdom Literature

Rios’s directness and the poem’s absence of ambiguity make its message emphatic: Even the smallest acts of sharing make humanity more, well, humane, so be generous to each other. Although the poem is deliberately light on details about exactly how to engage more fully in the kind of giving it advocates, the advice is clear and compelling, urging its audience to live better, fuller, more compassionate lives. 


In thus encouraging readers to take real-world action, the poem hearkens to the tradition of inspirational works known as Wisdom Literature. This mode comprises many genres, including fables, parables, proverbs, sutras, koans, and fairy tales; regardless of form, Wisdom Literature is defined by its fundamental goal of creating more virtuous and more morally aware people. From this perspective, literature exists to heal the world. 


Wisdom Literature will be most familiar to contemporary audiences as the poetry of 20th-century poets Kahlil Gibran, Gregory Pardlo, and Maya Angelou, as well as 21st-century poets Amanda Gorman and Rupi Kaur. Typically, their work is accessible and reader-friendly, stripped of elaborate symbols, learned allusions, or complex imagery. These works seek to inspire more than intellectualize ideas: They are occasions for meditation intended to encourage living a better life.

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