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Virginia Grutter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Virginia Grütter (born Virginia Teresa del Carmen and Inés, Puntarenas, Costa Rica, 20 April 1929 – 3 March 2000) was a Costa Rican writer, actress and theatrical director.[1][2] In the year 2000 she died of respiratory failure.

Publications

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Poetry

  • "Give me your hand" (1954).
  • "Poetry of this world" (1973).
  • "Cradle songs and of battle" (1994). Áncora Prize of Literature in 1996.

Prose

  • "Friends and the wind" (the original title was "Boris") (1978).
  • "Missing" (1980).
  • "Singing to my time: memories" (1998).

References

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  1. ^ Sommer, Doris. "Poets on the Battlefield." The Women's Review of Books 5, no. 10/11 (1988): 17-18. doi:10.2307/4020349
  2. ^ Campos, Jorge Blanco (1987). "Proyecto Para Una Historia Social De La Narrativa De Costa Rica". Ibero-amerikanisches Archiv. 13 (1): 15–28. ISSN 0340-3068.
  • Grutter, V. (1998). Singing to my time: memories. Saint José: Publishing Women.
  • Monge Meza, C.F. (1984). The separate image: ideological models of the poetry costarricense, 1950–1980. Saint José: Institute of the Book, MCJD.
  • Quesada Soto, To. (2010). Brief history of the literature costarricense. Saint José: Publisher Costa Rica.
  • Ugalde, And. (2010). Virginia Grutter. In: Club of Books. Recovered on 25 September of the 2012: http://www.clubdelibros.com/biografias/183-virginia-grutter.html
  • Víquez Guzmán, B. (2009). Virginia Grutter Jiménez. In: the Literary art and his Theory. Recovered on 25 September of the 2012:

http://heredia-costarica.zonalibre.org/archives/2009/09/virginia-grutter-jimenez.html

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  • Poems of Virginia Grütter in the official place of the National Institute of the Women of Costa Rica:
  • Poems of Virginia Grütter in the program Further of the syllable, poetic anthology costarricense. Of the State University to Distance of Costa Rica:[1] Archived 26 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Technical index card of the film "Virginia Grütter: stronger that the pain" in the official place of the film-maker Quinka F. Stoehr:[2] Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine