Marjorie Agosín
Marjorie Agosín | |
---|---|
Born |
June 15, 1955 |
Alma mater | Indiana University |
Occupation | novelist |
Marjorie Agosín (born June 15, 1955) is a Chilean-American writer. Agosín was born in 1955 to Moises and Frida Agosín in Berkeley, California, before quickly moving to Chile, where she lived her childhood in a German community.[1] She is a prolific author: her published books, including those she has written as well as those she has edited, number over eighty.[2] She contributed the piece "Women of smoke" to the 1984 anthology Sisterhood Is Global: The International Women's Movement Anthology, edited by Robin Morgan.[3] Her two most recent books are both poetry collections, The Light of Desire / La Luz del Deseo, translated by Lori Marie Carlson (Swan Isle Press, 2009), and Secrets in the Sand: The Young Women of Juárez, translated by Celeste Kostopulos-Cooperman (White Pine Press, 2006), about the female homicides in Ciudad Juárez.[4] She teaches Spanish language and Latin American literature at Wellesley College.[5] She has won notability for her outspokenness for women's rights in Chile.[6] The United Nations has honored her for her work on human rights.[7] She also won many important literary awards. The Chilean government awarded her with the Gabriela Mistral Medal of Honor for Life Achievement in 2002.
Selected published works
- Brujas Y Algo Más: Witches and Other Things, (Latin American Literary Review Press, 1984), ISBN 978-0-935480-16-0
- Violeta Parra: santa de pura greda : un estudio de su obra poética, (with Inés Dölz-Blackburn), (Planeta, 1988), ISBN 9562470164
- Sargazo (White Pine Press, 1993) ISBN 978-1-877727-27-6
- Tapestries of hope, threads of love, (University of New Mexico Press, 1996) ISBN 0-8263-1692-1
- Always from Somewhere Else: A Memoir of My Chilean Jewish Father, (Editor), (Feminist Press, 2000), ISBN 1-55861-256-4
- Women, gender, and human rights: a global perspective, (Rutgers University Press, 2001), ISBN 0-8135-2983-2
- Secrets in the Sand: The Young Women of Juárez (White Pine Press, 2006), ISBN 1-893996-47-6
- The Light of Desire / La Luz del Deseo, translated by Lori Marie Carlson (Swan Isle Press, 2010), ISBN 978-0-9748881-7-0
- I Lived on Butterfly Hill, (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, 2014) ISBN 978-1-4169-5344-9
References
- ↑ Memorial de una escritura: aproximaciones a la obra de Marjorie Agosín
- ↑ Library of Congress Online Catalog > Marjorie Agosín
- ↑ "Table of Contents: Sisterhood is global :". Catalog.vsc.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ Reinares, Laura Barberán (2010). "Globalized Philomels: State Patriarchy, Transnational Capital, and the Fermicides on the US- Mexican Border in Roberto Bolaño's 2666". South Atlantic Review. 75 (4): 51–72, on 69. JSTOR 41635653.
- ↑ Wellesley College > Department of Spanish Faculty
- ↑ Wellesley College Public Affairs Profile: Marjorie Agosín
- ↑ Wellesley College Public Affairs Profile: Marjorie Agosin
External links
- Poems: The International Literary Quarterly > Issue 3, May 2008 > Poems by Marjorie Agosín translated by Roberta Gordenstein
- Poem: poets.org > Secrets in the Sand (and the night was a precipice) by Marjorie Agosín
- Review: Barnes and Noble Online > Secrets in the Sand: The Young Women of Juárez by Marjorie Agosín > Review by Library Journal
- Vivancos Pérez, Ricardo F. “Marjorie Agosín’s Poetics of Memory: Human Rights, Feminism, and Literary Forms.” Confronting Global Gender Justice: Women’s Lives, Human Rights. Ed. Debra Bergoffen, Paula Ruth Gilbert, Tamara Harvey, and Connie L. McNeely. Oxford, UK: Routledge, 2010. 112-25.