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Fanny Buitrago

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(Redirected from Fanny Buitrago González)
Fanny Buitrago
Born1943-5
Barranquilla, Colombia
OccupationWriter and playwright
Genre
Notable worksSeñora de la miel

Fanny Buitrago is a Colombian fiction writer and playwright best known for her novel Señora de la miel. She was born in Barranquilla, Colombia between 1943 and 1945.

Early life

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Fanny Buitrago was born in Barranquilla, Colombia between 1943 and 1945,[1] and grew up in Cali.[2] Her father Luis Buitrago was from Tunja, and her mother was from Barranquilla.[3] Buitrago has a sister Letty, who has worked as her editor and literary agent, and a brother Luis.[4] According to Letty, Fanny "began to read and write at a very early age, under the influence of two indefatigable readers: her father, Luis Buitrago, and her maternal grandfather, Tomás González".[3] As a child she would invent stories for her siblings in exchange for money or chores; around the age of 8 or 9, she started writing stories by hand.[4]

Literary career

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Buitrago's best-known book is Señora de la miel (Señora Honeycomb or Mrs Honeycomb; translated into English in 1996).[5] Her first novel was El hostigante verano de los dioses (The Tormenting Summer of the Gods; 1963).

In 1982 Buitrago was an award fellow of the DAAD Künstlerprogramm in Berlin.[6] In 1984 she was a writer in residence at the University of Iowa's International Writing Program.[7]

Themes

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She generally avoids overt political messages, although she has dealt with the civil unrest of la Violencia, preferring to focus on broken homes and families which act as metaphors for a country suffering great upheaval.[8] Her works have been associated with the Nadaísmo movement in Colombia.

Works

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Novels

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  • El hostigante verano de los dioses (1963)
  • Cola de zorro (1970)
  • Los Pañamanes (1979)
  • Señora de la miel (1993); English translation: Señora honeycomb (1996)
  • Bello animal (2002)
  • El legado de Corín Tellado (2008)
  • En torno al frenesí (2020)

Short story collections

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  • Las distancias doradas (1964)
  • La otra gente (1973)
  • Bahía sonora: relatos de la isla (1975)
  • Los amores de Afrodita: cuatro cuentos y una novela breve (1983)
  • Los fusilados de ayer (1987)
  • ¡Líbranos de todo mal! (1989)
  • Los encantamientos (2003)
  • Canciones profanas (2011)

Plays

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  • El hombre de paja (1964)
  • A la diestra y a la siniestra (1987)
  • Al final del ave María (1991)
  • El día de la boda (2005)

Literature for children

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  • La casa del abuelo (1979)
  • La casa del arco iris: una novela de la infancia (1986)
  • Cartas del palomar (1988)
  • La casa del verde doncel (1990)
  • Historias de la Rosa Luna (2008)
  • Un genio en la pantalla (2013)
  • Los cuentos de Juanita Campana (2019)

Awards

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In 1964 she won the Cali Theater Festival Prize for her play El hombre de paja (Scarecrow).[8]

References

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  1. ^ "Nacida entre 1943 y 1945, la fecha oscila dependiendo de la fuente y la escritora misma prefiere no precisarla", footnote p471, Celis, Nadia (April–September 2016). "Tras medio siglo de El Hostigante Verano de los Dioses: Fanny Buitrago y la "autenticidad" caribe". Revista Iberoamericana (in Spanish). 82 (255–256): 471–486. doi:10.5195/reviberoamer.2016.7401.
  2. ^ Williams, Raymond Leslie (2007). "Buitrago, Fanny [Biography]". The Columbia Guide to the Latin American Novel Since 1945. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 136–137. doi:10.7312/will12688. ISBN 978-0-231-12688-5.
  3. ^ a b Buitrago, Letty (1994). "Fanny Buitrago". In Calderón Schrader, Camilo (ed.). Gran Enciclopedia de Colombia 9 Biografías (in Spanish). Vol. 1 Abad–Lemaitre. Bogotá, Colombia: Círculo de Lectores. pp. 96–97. ISBN 958-28-0294-4.
  4. ^ a b Celis, Nadia (July–December 2014). "La magia de contar historias: Fanny Buitrago, en conversación con Nadia Celis Salgado". Revista de Estudios Colombianos (in Spanish). 44: 48–52.
  5. ^ "Senora Honeycomb (Review)". Publishers Weekly. 1996-01-29. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  6. ^ Borsche, Dahlia; Fehrmann, Silvia, eds. (November 2022). Jahrbuch 2022 (PDF). Berliner Künstlerprogramm des DAAD. p. 108.
  7. ^ "Colombian residents | International Writing Program". Iwp.uiowa.edu. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  8. ^ a b Smith, Verity (1997). Encyclopedia of Latin American Literature. Taylor & Francis. pp. 152–153. ISBN 9780203304365.