Teresa Porzecanski Explained

Awards:Premio Bartolomé Hidalgo
Premio Morosolli
Premio Alas
Occupation:anthropologist, writer, professor
Teresa Porzecanski
Birth Name:Teresa Porzecanski Cohen
Birth Date:5 May 1945
Birth Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Alma Mater:Universidad de la República

Teresa Porzecanski Cohen (born 5 de May 1945)[1] is an Uruguayan anthropologist, writer and academic.

Biography

Porzecanski Cohen was born and raised in Montevideo to a Jewish family.[2] [3] Her father was and Ashkenazi from Liepāja, Latvia and her mother, a Sephardic from Syria. She graduated from the University of the Republic with a degree in social work.[4]

Her works have included a focus on the Jewish communities of Uruguay, afrodescendant minorities, as well as prejudice and ethnic issues.[5] She has been is a professor and academic at the Catholic University of Uruguay, the Latin American Center for Human Economy and the University of the Republic. From 1978-1981, she collected oral histories of Jewish immigrants which was published as Life Stories of Jewish Immigrants to Uruguay in its first edition in Spanish in 1986.[6] In a review for the American Jewish Archives, Alejandro Lilienthal called it a good introduction to the subject, outside of the transcriptions of the oral histories.[7]

Her fiction is part of a tradition of works exploring identities and migration maladjustments, prejudice against minorities, and women interior worlds.[8]

In 1992, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship,[9] during which she studied the Sephardim and rabbinic lore.[1] She has also received a Fulbright scholarship.[2] as well as a Rockefeller Residency Grant in Bellagio, Italy, to write her fiction. She received five awards by the Ministry of Education of Uruguay, two awards by the Municipality of Montevideo, the Critics Award Bartolomé Hidalgo (1995) and the Morosoli Award for Literature (2004).

Selected works

Fiction

Nonfiction

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lockhart, Darrell B.. Jewish Writers of Latin America: A Dictionary. 23 March 2014. 2013-08-21. Taylor & Francis. 9781134754274. 483–.
  2. Encyclopedia: Porzecanski, Teresa. Encyclopaedia Judaica. Jewish Virtual Library / The Gale Group . 23 March 2014. Florinda F. Goldberg.
  3. Book: Rosa, Debora Cordeiro . Trauma, Memory and Identity in Five Jewish Novels from the Southern Cone . 2012-04-19 . Lexington Books . 9780739172988 . 23 March 2014.
  4. Web site: 2016-08-17 . "El ensayo es una forma de ficción" . 2024-11-29 . EL PAIS . en.
  5. Book: Young. Richard. Cisneros. Odile. Historical Dictionary of Latin American Literature and Theater. registration. 23 March 2014. 2010-12-18. Scarecrow Press. 9780810874985. 702–.
  6. Book: Agosín, Marjorie. Passion, Memory, and Identity. 23 March 2014. 1999. UNM Press. 9780826320490. 33–.
  7. Alejandro Lilienthal. Those who did not make it to Ellis Island: Jewish Life South of the Rio Grande. American Jewish Archives. 1989.
  8. Valverde. Estela. 2004. 'Mujeres de mucha monta': Women expressing their erotic desires. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research. 10. 1. 23–42. 1326-0219. 10.1080/13260219.2004.10429979. 143671863.
  9. Web site: 1992 Fellowships. https://web.archive.org/web/20121004142700/http://www.gf.org/fellows/results?competition=ALL&fellowship_category=ALL&lower_bound=1992&page=3&query=&upper_bound=1992&x=20&y=11. dead. 4 October 2012. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. 23 March 2014.