Английская Википедия:Alicia Yánez Cossío

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Alicia Yáñez Cossío (Quito, September 10, 1928[1] ) is a prominent Ecuadorian poet, novelist and journalist.

Yáñez Cossio is one of the leading figures in Ecuadorian literature and in Latin America, and she is the first Ecuadorian to win the Premio Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, which she received in 1996.

In 2008 she received Ecuador's highest literary prize, the "Premio Eugenio Espejo" for her lifetime of work.

Biography

Daughter of Ing.el Alfonso Yánez Proaño and Clemencia Cossío Larrea. When she was six years old she entered the Sagrados Corazones School of Quito, where she stayed for a while due to academic failings stemming from a dislike of arithmetic. However, since she was young, Cossío she always desired to be a writer because of her great talent with words.3

Yáñez Cossío would later say: “I had an extremely happy childhood, maybe a bit boyish, influenced by the first books I read: the works of Julio Verne and Tarzan’s feats. I never liked dolls.”4

Her characters frequently represent the community that fights to rescue woman's elementary rights. Male chauvinism is a recurring theme in her writing. Irony, sarcasm and hyperbole make evident twisted masculine superiority, where she critiques social concepts, such as virginity, homosexuality, etc.

She has other unprecedented novels with similar characteristics. One of them is "El Cristo Feo" ("The Ugly Christ").

In 1993, she became a widow. She is a woman whose fame has expanded beyond the borders of her homeland.

In 1996, she received the Premio Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz for the best Latin American novel written by a woman.5

In 1998, she edited "Retratos cubanos" ("Cuban Portraits") with 18 stories written between 1957 and 1961 from Cuba. They mainly discussed man's battle to attain freedom. When the original authors left the island, the stories were confiscated, later to be re-written in 1996, mixing history with crude realism.

She is the mother of writer Luis Miguel Campos Yáñez.

Works

Novels

  • Bruna, soroche y los tíos (1973) (English trans. "Bruna and Her Sisters in the Sleeping City" by Kenneth J. A. Wishina, 1999)
  • Yo vendo unos ojos negros (1979)
  • Más allá de las islas (1980) (English trans. "Beyond the Islands" by Amalia Gladhart, 2011)
  • La Cofradía del Mullo de la virgen Pipona (1985) (English trans. "The Potbellied Virgin" by Amalia Gladhart, 2006)
  • La casa del sano placer (1989)
  • El cristo feo (1995)
  • Aprendiendo a morir (1997)
  • Y amarle pude... (2000)
  • Sé que vienen a matarme (2001)
  • Concierto de sombras (2004)
  • Esclavos de Chatham (2006)
  • Memorias de la Pivihuarmi Cuxirimay Ocllo (2008)

Poetry

  • Luciolas (1949)
  • De la sangre y el tiempo (1964)
  • Plebeya mínima (1974)

Short stories

  • El beso y otras fricciones (1975)
  • Relatos cubanos (1998)

Theater

  • Hacia el Quito de ayer (1951)

Children's literature

  • El viaje de la abuela (1997)
  • Pocapena (1997)
  • Los triquitraques (2002)
  • ¡No más! (2004)
  • La canoa de la abuela (2006)

Awards

The Alicia Yáñez Cossío Children's Literature Competition

In 2002, she was honored by the Government of the Province of Pichincha and its Provincial Patronage by the institution of a children's literature contest that bears her name. This contest aims to stimulate all the districts of Pichincha's provinces to contribute to the creation of spaces for expression, research and strengthening of cultural identity.[2]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

  1. Cossío, Alicia Yánez; C, Sara Beatriz Vanégas Cobeña Vanégas (1 de enero de 1991). Bruna, soroche y los tíos. Libresa. Шаблон:ISBN. Consultado el 12 de octubre de 2016.
  2. Cossío, Alicia Yánez (1 de enero de 1996). El viaje de la abuela. Libresa. Шаблон:ISBN. Consultado el 12 de octubre de 2016.
  3. Volver arriba↑ Rodolfo Pérez Pimentel. «Alicia Yánez Cossío (sic): "Alicia Yánez Cossío"» Шаблон:Webarchive. Consultado el 2010.

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