Английская Википедия:Dina Salústio

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short descriptionШаблон:Infobox writer

Dina Salústio (born 1941) is a novelist from Cabo Verde, who is the first woman from the country to publish a novel, and the first writer from the country to have a novel translated to English.

Biography

Dina Salústio is the pseudonym of Bernardina Oliveira, who was born in 1941 in Santo Antão.[1] After training as a social worker, she worked for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[1] She has also worked in Portugal and Angola as a journalist, social worker and teacher.[2]

A prominent literary activist in Cabo Verde, she co-founded the Associação Escritores Cabo-Verdianos,[3] as well as two magazines, Mudjer and Ponto e Vírgula.[1] Her novel A Louca de Serrano was the first novel to be published by a Cabo Verdean woman.[4][5] Its translation, The Madwoman of Serrano by Jethro Soutar, is the first English translation of a novel from Cabo Verde.[4][5]

Awards

In 2020 the English translation of A Louca de Serrano was short-listed for The Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize.[4] In 2016 she was presented with a Rosalía de Castro Award for lifetime achievement by PEN Galicia (es).[6][7][8] In 1994 she was awarded the national prize for children's literature.[9]

Reception

Salústio's works, both creative and non-fiction, address issues relating to women's rights and Cabo Verdean society and centring female perspectives.[10][11] Her works are considered an important contribution to postcolonial literature of Cabo Verde.[12] She is also viewed as a writer who counters the masculine perspectives that can be prevalent in African literature.[13]

Selected works

Novels

  • A Louca de Serrano (The Madwoman of Serrano), 1998[14][15]
  • Filhas do Vento (Daughters of the Wind), 2009[16]
  • Veromar (See-the-sea), 2019[17]

Short stories

  • Mornas eram as noites (Warm were the Nights), 1994[18]
  • Filhos de Deus (God's Children), 2018[19]

Non-fiction

  • Violência contra as mulheres (Violence Against Women), 1994[20]

References

Шаблон:Authority control