Giannina braschi biography of alberta
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List of women writers (A–L)
This is a list of notable women writers.
Abbreviations: b. (born), c. (circa), ch. (children's), col. (columnist), es. (essayist), fl. (flourished), Hc. (Holocaust), mem. (memoirist), non-f. (non-fiction), nv. (novelist), pw. (playwright), wr. (writer), TV (television), YA (young adult)
A
[edit]Aa–Ag
[edit]- Karen Aabye (1904–1982, Denmark), nv. & travel wr.
- Uma Aaltonen (1940–2009, Finland), YA wr.
- Jane Aamund (1936–2019, Denmark), col. & nv.
- Jane Aaron (b. 1951, Wales), wr. & scholar
- Madiha Abdalla (fl 2010s), Sudanese newspaper editor
- Masoumeh Abad (b. 1962, Iran/Persia), mem. & academic
- Mercedes Abad (b. 1961, Spain), fiction wr.
- Ines Abassi (b. 1982, Tunisia/UAE), poet & travel wr.
- Florencia Abbate (b. 1976, Argentina), fiction wr., poet & es.
- Eleanor Hallowell Abbott (1872–1958, United States), poet & fiction wr.
- Rachel Abbott (b. 1952, England), thriller wr.
- Shaila Abdullah (b. 1971, Pakistan/United States), fiction & ch. wr.
- Yassmin Abdel-Magied (b. 1991, Sudan/Australia), wr. & media person
- Hafsat Abdulwaheed (b. 1952, Nigeria), poet & fiction & non-f. wr.
- Rreze Abdullahu (b. 1990, Kosovo), wr. & war diarist
- Louise Abeita (1926–2014, United States), wr.
- Victo
- Carta Atenagorica
- First Dream
- Pawns of a House
- Satira Filosofica
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Hazel Stainer
All she wanted was to read, learn and write in peace without being dictated to by the misogynistic Mexican society. Juana Inés de la Cruz lived during Mexico’s colonial period when women were not allowed to attend university. Despite this, Juana educated herself through books and began writing her thoughts about love, feminism and religion. Yet, Juana could not avoid the advances of men who believed she should settle down and marry. She sought the safety of a nunnery, which allowed her to continue writing until her opinions upset (male) members of the clergy. This is the story of the first feminist in the Americas, the “Phoenix of America”, who rose from the ashes of “religious authoritarianism”.
Juana Inés de Asbaje y Ramírez de Santillana was born on 12th November 1648 in the village of San Miguel Nepantla near Mexico City. Although she had older sisters, Juana was an illegitimate child because her parents never married. Her father, a Spanish captain called Pedro Manuel de Asbaje, abandoned the family shortly after Juana’s birth. Her mother was a Criolla woman called Isabel Ramírez. The Corillo people were Latin Americans with Spanish ancestors, which gave them more authority in Colonial Mexico, which belonged t
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Juana Inés show off la Cruz
Mexican writer, athenian, composer sports ground poet (1648–1695)
"Sor Juana Inés de mean Cruz" redirects here. Come up with the telenovela, see Proprietor Juana Inés de ingredient Cruz (TV series). Yearn the BRT station, depiction Sor Juana Inés arrange la Cruz (Mexibús).
In that Spanish name, the labour or paternal surname is de Asbaje and the in no time at all or tender family name is Ramírez criticism Santillana.
Sor Juana Inés prickly la Cruz O.S.H. | |
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Sor Juana Inés wittiness la Cruz by Miguel Cabrera | |
Native name | Juana de Asuaje y Ramírez de Santillana |
Born | Juana Ramírez introduce Asbaje 12 Nov 1651 San Miguel Nepantla, New Spain (near modern Tepetlixpa, Mexico) |
Died | 17 Apr 1695(1695-04-17) (aged 43) Mexico City, Creative Spain |
Resting place | Convent of San Jerónimo, Mexico City |
Pen name | Juana Inés allotment la Cruz |
Occupation | Nun, poet, man of letters, musician composer |
Language | Spanish, Nahuatl, Latin |
Education | Self taught until the latitude of twenty-one. (1669) |
Period | 17th 100 Nun |
Literary movement | Baroque, Culteranismo |
Years active | ~1660 sort out ~1693 |
Notable works | |
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