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Ana María Shua

Ana María Shua (born 22 April 1951) is an Argentine writer. She is particularly well known for her work in microfiction.

Ana María Shua
BornAna María Schoua
(1951-04-22) April 22, 1951 (age 72)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
OccupationWriter, illustrator
Alma materUniversity of Buenos Aires
GenreFiction
Notable awardsGuggenheim Fellowship
SpouseSilvio Fabrykant
ChildrenGabriela Fabrykant
Paloma Fabrykant
Vera Fabrykant

Shua has published over eighty books in numerous genres including novels, short stories, microfiction, poetry, drama, children's literature, books of humor and Jewish folklore, anthologies, film scripts, journalistic articles, and essays.[1] She has received numerous national and international awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is one of Argentina's premier living writers.[1][2][3][4]

She has been referred to as the "Queen of the Micro-Story" in the world of Spanish literature.[5]

Career Edit

Early life and education Edit

Born Ana María Schoua (the original spelling for her surname) in Buenos Aires in 1951,[6] Shua became interested in writing at a young age, inspired by books such as Black Beauty.[7] She published her first book on poetry, El sol y yo, in 1967 when she was only a sixteen-year-old student at the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires,[8] having won a prize from the Fondo Nacional de las Artes that paid for the printing of 1,000 copies.[6] The collection won the "Faja de Honor" award given by the Argentine Society of Writers.[9][3][10]

Shua studied at the University of Buenos Aires and obtained a degree in education, specializing in literature.[11][12]

Exile Edit

During the last military dictatorship in Argentina, often called the National Reorganization Process, Shua took a boat to Europe and went into exile in France, part of a wave of exiled political figures and intellectuals. Her sister and her two cousins were also exiled.[13] She lived in Paris from 1976 to 1977, working for the Spanish magazine Cambio 16.[14][15]

Return to Argentina and literary success Edit

Once back in Argentina, Shua published her first novel: Soy paciente, released in 1980, for which she won an award given by the Losada publishing house.[16] The book is often read as a metaphor for the military dictatorship, which was still in power at the time.[17]

The following year she published her first short-story collection, Los días de pesca, followed in 1984 by her first commercial success, the novel Los amores de Laurita.[18] That same year, she published La sueñera, her first collection of microfiction—the extremely short stories that would become her signature, also sometimes known in English as "flash fiction."[19] Shua had been working on La sueñera for 10 years before it was published.[20]

Since then, she has published the works of microfiction Casa de Geishas, Botánica del caos, Temporada de fantasmas, Cazadores de letras (a compilation that includes her first four microfiction collections), and Fenómenos de circo.[21] In explaining her affection for the genre, Shua has said:

"I really like to feel that I am inside a text in which every word is essential, in which rhythm and sound are as important as meaning and cannot be separated."[22]

She has also described the super-short format as requiring authors "to work with the knowledge of the reader, like in martial arts, where you take advantage of the force of your opponent."[23]

In 1994, she was granted a Guggenheim Fellowship to write her novel El libro de los recuerdos, which tells the story of a Jewish family in Argentina,[16] somewhat based on her own family's history.[13]

Shua has worked as a journalist, a publicist, and a screenwriter, adapting some of her writings, including Los amores de Laurita, directed by Antonio Ottone.[24] She also co-wrote the script for the Juan José Jusid's film Where Are You My Love, That I Cannot Find You?[25] Shua has also written books for children[9] and works of humor and folklore, including El pueblo de los tontos, the first Spanish-language telling of the traditional Jewish Chełm stories.[16]

A complete collection of her stories was published in 2009 under the title Que tengas una vida interesante,[26] and an English translation of some of her stories was published the same year under the title Microfictions.[27] Other English translations include The Book of Memories, Quick Fix, and Circus Freaks.[28]

Awards and recognition Edit

 
Ana María Shua being interviewed for the documentary film En el nombre del padre.

Among Shua's honors include her two awards for El sol y yo, her award for Soy paciente, and the Guggenheim Fellowship. She also received honors from the Banco del Libro and International Board on Books for Young People for her children's book La fábrica del terror,[22][29] and first place in the stories category for her book Fenómenos de circo from the Argentine Ministry of Culture.[30]

Her 1997 novel La muerte como efecto secundario was included on the International Congress of the Spanish Language's list of the 100 best Spanish novels of the quarter-century.[31]

Shua was the recipient of the first Juan José Arreola Ibero-American Prize for Mini-Fiction in 2016.[32]

Personal life Edit

Shua's parents were Jewish, of Polish and Lebanese origin,[13] although her father was a militant atheist and she was raised largely without religion. But, Shua has said, "To be Jewish you don't have to study, nor believe, nor know anything in particular: it is not something that you choose," and Jewish themes have appeared occasionally in her work.[6]

As a fiction writer, Shua has said she avoids reading nonfiction, including reviews and literary criticism of her own work.[22]

She is married to the architect and photographer Silvio Fabrykant, whom she wed in 1975.[33] The couple has three children: Gabriela, Vera, and Paloma Fabrykant.[34]

Works Edit

Novels Edit

  • Soy paciente (translated as Patient, 1980)
  • Los amores de Laurita (1984)
  • El libro de los recuerdos (The Book of Memories, 1994)
  • La muerte como efecto secundario (Death as a Side Effect, 1997)
  • El peso de la tentación (2007)
  • Nemo (2003)

Short story collections Edit

  • Los días de pesca (1981)
  • Viajando se conoce gente (1988)
  • Como una buena madre (2001)
  • Historias verdaderas (2004)

Microfiction collections Edit

  • La sueñera (1984)
  • Casa de geishas (1992)
  • Botánica del caos (2000)
  • Temporada de fantasmas (Ghost Season, 2004)
  • Quick fix (2008)
  • Cazadores de Letras (2009)
  • Microfictions (2009)
  • Fenómenos de circo (Circus Freaks, 2011)

Children's books Edit

  • La batalla de los elefantes y los cocodrilos (1988)
  • La fábrica del terror (1991)
  • La puerta para salir del mundo (1992)
  • Cuentos judíos con fantasmas y demonios (1994)
  • Ani salva a la perra Laika (1996)
  • Historia de un cuento (1998)
  • Cuentos con magia (1999)
  • La luz mala (2000)
  • Los monstruos del Riachuelo (2001)
  • Planeta miedo (2002)
  • Su primera zanahoria (2005)
  • Un ciervo muy famoso (2005)

Humorous fiction Edit

  • El marido argentino promedio (1991)
  • Risas y emociones en la cocina judía (2003)

Poetry collections Edit

  • El sol y yo (1967)

Movie scripts Edit

  • Soy paciente (1986)
  • Los amores de Laurita (1986)
  • ¿Dónde estás amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar? (1992)

Documentary Edit

  • En el nombre del padre. Contrakultura, 2002. Biographical sketch of Argentine short-story writer Ana María Shua. Produced by Eduardo Montes-Bradley[21]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Ana María Shua". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  2. ^ "Ana María Shua - Imaginaria No. 31 - 9 de agosto de 1999". Imaginaria.com.ar. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  3. ^ a b "Bio: Ana María Shua". The International Literary Quarterly. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  4. ^ "Ana María Shua". Anamariashua.com.ar. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  5. ^ Clarín.com (25 September 2017). "Ana María Shua, la reina del microrrelato". www.clarin.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  6. ^ a b c Ruiz-Bravo, Coral Cenizo (2018). "Entrevista a Ana María Shua". Microtextualidades: Revista Internacional de microrrelato y minificción. 3.
  7. ^ "Ana María Shua". Imaginaria. 2000-08-09. Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  8. ^ "Ana María Shúa será jurado de la primera edición de los Premios María Elena Walsh". Asociación de Ex Alumnos del Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  9. ^ a b Shua, Ana María, 1951- (August 2016). La fábrica del terror 1. Sanzol, Jorge (1a ed.). Buenos Aires. ISBN 978-950-07-5633-4. OCLC 987436420.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Cook, Alyce (2003). "Review: All Facets of Ana María Shua's Creative World Reviewed Work: El río de los sueños: Interamer. 70. Organización de los Estados Americanos by Rhonda Dahl Buchanan". Confluencia. University of Northern Colorado. 19 (1): 191–193. JSTOR 27922969.
  11. ^ "Shua, Ana María". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  12. ^ Agins Lincow, Jamie (2018). La distopía en las novelas de Ana María Shua. Madrid. ISBN 978-84-946301-8-7. OCLC 1077775660.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ a b c Silvia G. Dapía, "Polish and Jewish Identities in the Narratives of Ana María Shua", Polish American Studies Vol. 65, No. 2 (Autumn, 2008), University of Illinois Press pp. 53-69.
  14. ^ Buchanan, Rhonda Dahl (1998). "Narrating Argentina's "Epoca del Miedo" in Ana María Shua's "El libro de los recuerdos"". Confluencia. 13 (2): 84–91. ISSN 0888-6091. JSTOR 27922623.
  15. ^ "The Short Fiction of Ana María Shua: A Bilingual Reading and Conversation". Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  16. ^ a b c Sadow, Stephen (2012). "An Interview with Ana Maria Shua". Northeastern University Library.
  17. ^ Friera, Silvina (2017-06-26). ""No hay nada que parezca más trágico que un cómico" | Ana María Shua y Florencia Bendersky hablan de Soy paciente". PAGINA12. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  18. ^ RADIO 5 (2015-12-24). "Ana María Shua, escritora". RTVE.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  19. ^ Escritores.org. "Shua, Ana María". www.escritores.org (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  20. ^ FERRERO, ADRIÁN; Shúa, Ana María (2016). "Ana María Shúa". Hispamérica. 45 (135): 73–82. ISSN 0363-0471. JSTOR 44507845.
  21. ^ a b . Anamariashua.com.ar. Archived from the original on 2015-08-26. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  22. ^ a b c "Grafemas Diciembre 2008: Entrevista". people.wku.edu. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  23. ^ Gallego-Díaz, Soledad (2009-04-10). "La minificción tiene posibilidades infinitas". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  24. ^ Los amores de Laurita (1986) - Ficha técnica, Sinopsis, Imágenes, Trailer, Actores, Cast | cinenacional.com, retrieved 2020-09-11
  25. ^ Jusid, Juan José (1992-08-06), ¿Dónde estás amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar? (Drama, Romance), Susú Pecoraro, Oscar Martínez, Fernando Siro, Luisina Brando, retrieved 2020-09-11
  26. ^ "El prólogo de Que tengas una vida interesante". Eterna Cadencia (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  27. ^ "Book Page : Nebraska Press". www.nebraskapress.unl.edu. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  28. ^ "Results for 'ana maria shua' > 'Ana María Shua' > 'English' [WorldCat.org]". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  29. ^ "ANA MARÍA SHUA | ALIBRATE". www.alibrate.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  30. ^ "Se entregaron los Premios Nacionales a la producción cultural 2010-2013". www.telam.com.ar. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  31. ^ Campos Acero, Carlos. "Píldoras literarias. Hoy, con "100", de Ana María Shu". La Provincia. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  32. ^ "Ana María Shua gana el primer oro de la cortísima distancia". ELMUNDO (in Spanish). 2016-10-14. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  33. ^ Clarín.com. "Mundos íntimos: ¿Cuántas neuronas pierde mi hija en cada pelea?". www.clarin.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  34. ^ "Soy inocente en literatura, pero no en la vida". La Capital. Retrieved 2020-09-11.

External links Edit

  • Official website (in Spanish)

maría, shua, born, april, 1951, argentine, writer, particularly, well, known, work, microfiction, bornana, maría, schoua, 1951, april, 1951, buenos, aires, argentinaoccupationwriter, illustratoralma, materuniversity, buenos, airesgenrefictionnotable, awardsgug. Ana Maria Shua born 22 April 1951 is an Argentine writer She is particularly well known for her work in microfiction Ana Maria ShuaBornAna Maria Schoua 1951 04 22 April 22 1951 age 72 Buenos Aires ArgentinaOccupationWriter illustratorAlma materUniversity of Buenos AiresGenreFictionNotable awardsGuggenheim FellowshipSpouseSilvio FabrykantChildrenGabriela FabrykantPaloma FabrykantVera FabrykantShua has published over eighty books in numerous genres including novels short stories microfiction poetry drama children s literature books of humor and Jewish folklore anthologies film scripts journalistic articles and essays 1 She has received numerous national and international awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship and is one of Argentina s premier living writers 1 2 3 4 She has been referred to as the Queen of the Micro Story in the world of Spanish literature 5 Contents 1 Career 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Exile 1 3 Return to Argentina and literary success 2 Awards and recognition 3 Personal life 4 Works 4 1 Novels 4 2 Short story collections 4 3 Microfiction collections 4 4 Children s books 4 5 Humorous fiction 4 6 Poetry collections 4 7 Movie scripts 4 8 Documentary 5 References 6 External linksCareer EditEarly life and education Edit Born Ana Maria Schoua the original spelling for her surname in Buenos Aires in 1951 6 Shua became interested in writing at a young age inspired by books such as Black Beauty 7 She published her first book on poetry El sol y yo in 1967 when she was only a sixteen year old student at the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires 8 having won a prize from the Fondo Nacional de las Artes that paid for the printing of 1 000 copies 6 The collection won the Faja de Honor award given by the Argentine Society of Writers 9 3 10 Shua studied at the University of Buenos Aires and obtained a degree in education specializing in literature 11 12 Exile Edit During the last military dictatorship in Argentina often called the National Reorganization Process Shua took a boat to Europe and went into exile in France part of a wave of exiled political figures and intellectuals Her sister and her two cousins were also exiled 13 She lived in Paris from 1976 to 1977 working for the Spanish magazine Cambio 16 14 15 Return to Argentina and literary success Edit Once back in Argentina Shua published her first novel Soy paciente released in 1980 for which she won an award given by the Losada publishing house 16 The book is often read as a metaphor for the military dictatorship which was still in power at the time 17 The following year she published her first short story collection Los dias de pesca followed in 1984 by her first commercial success the novel Los amores de Laurita 18 That same year she published La suenera her first collection of microfiction the extremely short stories that would become her signature also sometimes known in English as flash fiction 19 Shua had been working on La suenera for 10 years before it was published 20 Since then she has published the works of microfiction Casa de Geishas Botanica del caos Temporada de fantasmas Cazadores de letras a compilation that includes her first four microfiction collections and Fenomenos de circo 21 In explaining her affection for the genre Shua has said I really like to feel that I am inside a text in which every word is essential in which rhythm and sound are as important as meaning and cannot be separated 22 She has also described the super short format as requiring authors to work with the knowledge of the reader like in martial arts where you take advantage of the force of your opponent 23 In 1994 she was granted a Guggenheim Fellowship to write her novel El libro de los recuerdos which tells the story of a Jewish family in Argentina 16 somewhat based on her own family s history 13 Shua has worked as a journalist a publicist and a screenwriter adapting some of her writings including Los amores de Laurita directed by Antonio Ottone 24 She also co wrote the script for the Juan Jose Jusid s film Where Are You My Love That I Cannot Find You 25 Shua has also written books for children 9 and works of humor and folklore including El pueblo de los tontos the first Spanish language telling of the traditional Jewish Chelm stories 16 A complete collection of her stories was published in 2009 under the title Que tengas una vida interesante 26 and an English translation of some of her stories was published the same year under the title Microfictions 27 Other English translations include The Book of Memories Quick Fix and Circus Freaks 28 Awards and recognition Edit Ana Maria Shua being interviewed for the documentary film En el nombre del padre Among Shua s honors include her two awards for El sol y yo her award for Soy paciente and the Guggenheim Fellowship She also received honors from the Banco del Libro and International Board on Books for Young People for her children s book La fabrica del terror 22 29 and first place in the stories category for her book Fenomenos de circo from the Argentine Ministry of Culture 30 Her 1997 novel La muerte como efecto secundario was included on the International Congress of the Spanish Language s list of the 100 best Spanish novels of the quarter century 31 Shua was the recipient of the first Juan Jose Arreola Ibero American Prize for Mini Fiction in 2016 32 Personal life EditShua s parents were Jewish of Polish and Lebanese origin 13 although her father was a militant atheist and she was raised largely without religion But Shua has said To be Jewish you don t have to study nor believe nor know anything in particular it is not something that you choose and Jewish themes have appeared occasionally in her work 6 As a fiction writer Shua has said she avoids reading nonfiction including reviews and literary criticism of her own work 22 She is married to the architect and photographer Silvio Fabrykant whom she wed in 1975 33 The couple has three children Gabriela Vera and Paloma Fabrykant 34 Works EditNovels Edit Soy paciente translated as Patient 1980 Los amores de Laurita 1984 El libro de los recuerdos The Book of Memories 1994 La muerte como efecto secundario Death as a Side Effect 1997 El peso de la tentacion 2007 Nemo 2003 Short story collections Edit Los dias de pesca 1981 Viajando se conoce gente 1988 Como una buena madre 2001 Historias verdaderas 2004 Microfiction collections Edit La suenera 1984 Casa de geishas 1992 Botanica del caos 2000 Temporada de fantasmas Ghost Season 2004 Quick fix 2008 Cazadores de Letras 2009 Microfictions 2009 Fenomenos de circo Circus Freaks 2011 Children s books Edit La batalla de los elefantes y los cocodrilos 1988 La fabrica del terror 1991 La puerta para salir del mundo 1992 Cuentos judios con fantasmas y demonios 1994 Ani salva a la perra Laika 1996 Historia de un cuento 1998 Cuentos con magia 1999 La luz mala 2000 Los monstruos del Riachuelo 2001 Planeta miedo 2002 Su primera zanahoria 2005 Un ciervo muy famoso 2005 Humorous fiction Edit El marido argentino promedio 1991 Risas y emociones en la cocina judia 2003 Poetry collections Edit El sol y yo 1967 Movie scripts Edit Soy paciente 1986 Los amores de Laurita 1986 Donde estas amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar 1992 Documentary Edit En el nombre del padre Contrakultura 2002 Biographical sketch of Argentine short story writer Ana Maria Shua Produced by Eduardo Montes Bradley 21 References Edit a b Ana Maria Shua Words Without Borders Retrieved 2015 10 28 Ana Maria Shua Imaginaria No 31 9 de agosto de 1999 Imaginaria com ar Retrieved 2015 10 28 a b Bio Ana Maria Shua The International Literary Quarterly Retrieved 2015 10 28 Ana Maria Shua Anamariashua com ar Retrieved 2015 10 28 Clarin com 25 September 2017 Ana Maria Shua la reina del microrrelato www clarin com in Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 10 a b c Ruiz Bravo Coral Cenizo 2018 Entrevista a Ana Maria Shua Microtextualidades Revista Internacional de microrrelato y minificcion 3 Ana Maria Shua Imaginaria 2000 08 09 Retrieved 2020 09 10 Ana Maria Shua sera jurado de la primera edicion de los Premios Maria Elena Walsh Asociacion de Ex Alumnos del Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires in European Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 10 a b Shua Ana Maria 1951 August 2016 La fabrica del terror 1 Sanzol Jorge 1a ed Buenos Aires ISBN 978 950 07 5633 4 OCLC 987436420 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cook Alyce 2003 Review All Facets of Ana Maria Shua s Creative World Reviewed Work El rio de los suenos Interamer 70 Organizacion de los Estados Americanos by Rhonda Dahl Buchanan Confluencia University of Northern Colorado 19 1 191 193 JSTOR 27922969 Shua Ana Maria www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 2020 09 10 Agins Lincow Jamie 2018 La distopia en las novelas de Ana Maria Shua Madrid ISBN 978 84 946301 8 7 OCLC 1077775660 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Silvia G Dapia Polish and Jewish Identities in the Narratives of Ana Maria Shua Polish American Studies Vol 65 No 2 Autumn 2008 University of Illinois Press pp 53 69 Buchanan Rhonda Dahl 1998 Narrating Argentina s Epoca del Miedo in Ana Maria Shua s El libro de los recuerdos Confluencia 13 2 84 91 ISSN 0888 6091 JSTOR 27922623 The Short Fiction of Ana Maria Shua A Bilingual Reading and Conversation Retrieved 2020 09 11 a b c Sadow Stephen 2012 An Interview with Ana Maria Shua Northeastern University Library Friera Silvina 2017 06 26 No hay nada que parezca mas tragico que un comico Ana Maria Shua y Florencia Bendersky hablan de Soy paciente PAGINA12 Retrieved 2020 09 11 RADIO 5 2015 12 24 Ana Maria Shua escritora RTVE es in Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 11 Escritores org Shua Ana Maria www escritores org in European Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 11 FERRERO ADRIAN Shua Ana Maria 2016 Ana Maria Shua Hispamerica 45 135 73 82 ISSN 0363 0471 JSTOR 44507845 a b Ana Maria Shua Anamariashua com ar Archived from the original on 2015 08 26 Retrieved 2015 10 28 a b c Grafemas Diciembre 2008 Entrevista people wku edu Retrieved 2020 09 11 Gallego Diaz Soledad 2009 04 10 La minificcion tiene posibilidades infinitas El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 2020 09 11 Los amores de Laurita 1986 Ficha tecnica Sinopsis Imagenes Trailer Actores Cast cinenacional com retrieved 2020 09 11 Jusid Juan Jose 1992 08 06 Donde estas amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar Drama Romance Susu Pecoraro Oscar Martinez Fernando Siro Luisina Brando retrieved 2020 09 11 El prologo de Que tengas una vida interesante Eterna Cadencia in European Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 11 Book Page Nebraska Press www nebraskapress unl edu Retrieved 2020 09 11 Results for ana maria shua gt Ana Maria Shua gt English WorldCat org www worldcat org Retrieved 2020 09 11 ANA MARIA SHUA ALIBRATE www alibrate com in Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 11 Se entregaron los Premios Nacionales a la produccion cultural 2010 2013 www telam com ar Retrieved 2020 09 11 Campos Acero Carlos Pildoras literarias Hoy con 100 de Ana Maria Shu La Provincia Retrieved 2020 09 11 Ana Maria Shua gana el primer oro de la cortisima distancia ELMUNDO in Spanish 2016 10 14 Retrieved 2020 09 11 Clarin com Mundos intimos Cuantas neuronas pierde mi hija en cada pelea www clarin com in Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 10 Soy inocente en literatura pero no en la vida La Capital Retrieved 2020 09 11 External links EditAna Maria Shua at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Official website in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ana Maria Shua amp oldid 1167035588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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