Argentina Díaz Lozano
Argentina Díaz Lozano | |
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![]() Argentina Díaz Lozano, 1932 | |
Born | Argentina Bueso Mejía 5 December 1912 Santa Rosa de Copán, Honduras |
Died | 13 August 1999 Tegucigalpa, Honduras | (aged 89)
Occupation(s) | Writer, women's rights activist, suffragette, diplomat |
Years active | 1943–1999 |
Argentina Díaz Lozano (December 5, 1912 – August 13, 1999) was the pseudonym for the Honduran writer Argentina Bueso Mejía. She was a journalist and novelist, who wrote in the romantic style with feminist themes. She won numerous awards for her books, including the Golden Quetzel from Guatemala, the Honduran National Literature Prize Ramón Rosa" and the "Order Cruzeiro do Sud" from Brazil. She was admitted to the Academia Hondureña de la Lengua and is the only Central American woman whose work has officially contended for a Nobel Prize for Literature.
Biography
Argentina Bueso Mejía's year of birth has been cited as 1909, 1910
She began writing for newspapers while studying in Guatemala and published articles in Diario de Centroamerica, La Hora, El Imparcial, and Prensa Libre and at one point had a weekly column called "Jueves Literarios" (Literary Thursdays) that was carried in several Guatemalan papers.
Around 1951, she divorced her first husband, keeping his name, and sometime between 1952 and 1954, she married Guatemalan diplomat Darío Morales García. In 1956, Díaz Lozano accompanied Morales to Belgium, where Morales took up a post at the Consul of Guatemala in Antwerp, Belgium.
In 1967 and 1968, she conducted a series of interviews with the vice president of Guatemala
After the 1976 Guatemala earthquake, Díaz Lozano made her home in Antwerp and traveled back and forth between Belgium and Guatemala, continuing to publish into the 1990s. In February, 1999 she decided to make a trip to visit her homeland in Honduras.[7]
Díaz Lozano died on 13 August 1999 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.[1]
Awards
- 1944: Best Novel, Peregrinaje, Latin American Novel Contest Pan-American Union and Farrar & Rinehart[2]
- 1964: Book of the Year, Mansión in la bruma, Golden Quetzel (Guatemala)[2]
- 1968: Honduran National Literature Prize "Ramón Rosa" and admitted to the Academia Hondureña de la Lengua[7]
- 1968: Order Cruzeiro do Sud, Brazil
- 1974 Considered for a Nobel Prize for Literature
Publications
Short stories
- Perlas dé mi rosario ("Pearls of My Rosary", 1930)
- Topacios ("Topaz", 1940)
Poetry collections
- Tiempo que vivir ("A Time to Live", 1940)
- Peregrinaje ("Pilgrimage", 1944)
- Mayapán (1950)
- 49 días en la vida de una mujer ("49 Days in the Life of a Woman", 1956)
- Y tenemos que vivir... ("And We Have to Live...", 1960)
- Mansión en la bruma ("Mansion in the Mist", 1964)
- Fuego en la ciudad ("Fire in the City", 1966)
- Aquel año rojo ("That Red Year", 1973)
- Eran las doce... y de noche ("It Was Twelve O'clock… and Night", 1976)
- Ciudad Errante ("Wandering City", 1983)
- Caoba y orquídeas ("Mahogany and Orchids", 1986)
- Ha llegado una mujer ("A Woman Has Arrived", 1991)
Essays
- Método de mecanografía al tacto ("Touch Typing Method", 1939)
- Historia de la moneda en Guatemala ("History of currency in Guatemala", 1955)
- Sandalias sobre Europa ("Sandals on Europe", 1964)
- Historia de Centroamérica ("History of Central America", 1964)
Biographies
- Aquí viene un hombre: biografía de Clemente Marroquín Rojas; político, periodista y escritor de Guatemala ("Here Comes a Man: Biography of Clemente Marroquín Rojas; Politician, Journalist and Writer from Guatemala", 1968)
- Walt Whitman: primer poeta auténticamente americano ("Walt Whitman: First Authentically American Poet", 1976)
Recording from the Library of Congress
Argentina Díaz Lozano reading from her own work (1960). [1] [11]
Notes
- Her date of birth has been variously cited as 1912, 1910, 1909, but recent findings by her family show she was born on December 5, 1909, and was baptized in Santa Rosa de Copan on September 12, 1912, as Trinidad Mejia.
References
- ^ a b Gaitán Guzmán, Nery Alexis (2008). "Bibliographic Index of the Honduran Short Story" (PDF). Cervantes Virtual (in Spanish). Honolulu, Hawaii: Atlantic International University. p. 69. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g Escobedo, Juan Carlos (28 May 2006). "Argentina Díaz Lozano (1917–1999)". Literatura Guatemalteca (in Spanish). Guatemala City, Guatemala: Literatura Guatemalteca. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ "Reseña Histórica e Inicio de las Letras Hondureñas" (PDF). Colección Cultural Banco de America (in Spanish). Nicaragua: Enrique Bolaños Fundación. p. 248. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ Gonzalez, José (28 February 2013). "Argentina Diaz Lozano: Rectificacion Historica". Jose Gonzalez Paredes (in Spanish). La Paz, Honduras: Jose Gonzalez Paredes. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ a b c "Argentina Díaz Lozano". Biografias y Vidas (in Spanish). La Enciclopedia Biográfica en Línea. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ISBN 978-99926-54-06-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g Batres V, Ariel. "La política en las novellas de Argentina Díaz Lozano". Monografias (in Spanish). Monografias. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ Flores Asturias, Ricardo (6 June 2011). "Las Mujeres no Votan Porque Sí: Congreso Interamericano de Mujeres, 1947". Politica y Sentido Comun (in Spanish). Guatemala City, Guatemala: Ricardo Flores Asturias. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
- ^ "Del rosa al Nobel". El Mundo (in Spanish). Honduras: Diario Libre. 9 July 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ISBN 978-99926-33-05-2. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ "Honduras-born writer Argentína Díaz Lozano reading from her work". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2019-03-28.