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Judith Ortiz Cofer

Judith Ortiz Cofer (February 24, 1952 – December 30, 2016[2]) was a Puerto Rican author.[3][4] Her critically acclaimed and award-winning work spans a range of literary genres including poetry, short stories, autobiography, essays, and young-adult fiction. Ortiz Cofer was the Emeritus Regents' and Franklin Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Georgia, where she taught undergraduate and graduate creative writing workshops for 26 years. In 2010, Ortiz Cofer was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame,[5] and in 2013, she won the university's 2014 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award.[6]

Judith Ortiz Cofer
Judith Ortiz Cofer
BornJudith Ortiz
(1952-02-24)February 24, 1952
Hormigueros, Puerto Rico
DiedDecember 30, 2016(2016-12-30) (aged 64)
Louisville, Georgia, U.S.[1]
OccupationWriter, professor at the University of Georgia
NationalityPuerto Rican
EducationAugusta College (BA)
Florida Atlantic University (MA)
GenrePoetry, short stories, autobiography, essays, young adult novels
Notable worksA Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood

Ortiz Cofer hailed from a family of storytellers and drew heavily from her personal experiences as a Puerto Rican American woman.[7] In her work, Ortiz Cofer brings a poetic perspective to the intersection of memory and imagination. Writing in diverse genres, she investigated women issues, Latino culture, and the American South. Ortiz Cofer's work weaves together private life and public space through intimate portrayals of family relationships and rich descriptions of place. Her own papers are currently housed at the University of Georgia's Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library.[6]

Early years edit

Judith Ortíz Cofer was born to Jesus Lugo Ortíz and Fanny Morot in Hormigueros, Puerto Rico, on February 24, 1952.[8] She moved to Paterson, New Jersey with her family in 1956. Morot gave birth to Judith Ortíz Cofer when she was fifteen years old.[9] They believed they would have more opportunities for young parents in America. Despite Lugo's passion for academia, he left school and joined the U.S. Navy. He was stationed in Panama when his daughter was born. He met Judith Ortiz Cofer for the first time two years later. Call Me Maria is a young adult novel that was published in 2004.[10] It focuses on a teenage girl's transition from Puerto Rico to New York City. They often made back-and-forth trips between Paterson and Hormigueros. Ortíz Cofer reflects on these trips in her memoir, Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood,[11] stating they were annoying to both her education and her social life. While she was primarily educated in Paterson, New Jersey, she attended local schools in Puerto Rico while she was there.[12] While in Puerto Rico, Ortíz Cofer would stay in the home of her grandmother. Her transition between Puerto Rico and New Jersey greatly influenced her writing because she was able to contrast the two cultures. In 1967, when Ortíz Cofer was fifteen, her family moved to Augusta, Georgia, where she lived until her death in 2016. There, she attended Butler High School. Judith and her brother, Ronaldo, initially resisted the family's move South. Upon arriving in Georgia, however, Ortíz Cofer was struck by Augusta's vibrant colors and vegetation compared with the gray concrete and skies of city-life in Paterson.[13]

Academic and literary career edit

Ortiz Cofer received a B.A. in English from Augusta College, and later an M.A. in English literature from Florida Atlantic University. Early in her writing career, Ortiz Cofer won fellowships from Oxford University and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, which enabled her to begin developing her multi-genre body of work. Cofer was fluent in English and Spanish and worked as a bilingual teacher in the public schools of Palm Beach County, Florida, during the 1974–1975 school year. After she received her master's degree and published her first collection of poems she became a lecturer in English at the University of Miami at Coral Gables.[14]

In 1984, Ortiz Cofer joined the faculty of the University of Georgia as the Franklin Professor of English and Creative Writing.[5] After 26 years of teaching undergraduate and graduate students, Ortiz Cofer retired from the University of Georgia in December 2013.[8] Ortiz Cofer is best known for creative nonfiction works but she has worked in poetry, short fiction, children's books, and personal narrative. Cofer began her writing career with poetry, which she believed contained "the essence of language.” One of her earliest books was Peregrina (1986) which won the Riverstone International Chapbook Competition. She has received various awards such as grants from the Witter Bynner Foundation and the Georgia Council for the Arts, as well as fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts for poetry, the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, and the Florida Fine Arts Council. In 2010 Ortiz Cofer was admitted to the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. ,

Artistic and academic contributions edit

Ortiz Cofer's writing encompasses themes that emphasize the integration of cultural heritage and individual identity through the arts. She started the literary journal "Review" with the intention of giving marginalized writers a voice and promoting their writing. Additionally, Ortiz Cofer contributed to a number of literary anthologies, including as the well-known "The Norton Introduction to Literature," which is frequently used in college curriculum. She supervised creative writing students while teaching writing at the University of Georgia, Florida Atlantic University, and Rutgers University during her career. Along with writing and teaching, Ortiz Cofer also followed her interest for music by learning to play the guitar and penning songs. She frequently performed musically at conferences and literary gatherings to compliment her passion of reading.[citation needed]

Death edit

In July 2014, Ortiz Cofer was diagnosed with a rare type of liver cancer shortly after her retirement. She died on December 30, 2016, at her home in Jefferson County, Georgia. A memorial service was held on January 27, 2017, followed by a reception at the Demosthenian Hall. She is buried in the Louisville City Cemetery, Georgia.

Awards and honors edit

  • 1986, Riverstone International Chapbook Competition for her first collection of poems, Peregrina[6]
  • 1990, Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood received the PEN/Martha Albrand Special Citation in Nonfiction[6]
  • 1990, the essay "More Room" was awarded the Pushcart Prize, which celebrates work published by small presses.[6]
  • 1991, the essay "Silent Dancing" was selected for The Best American Essays 1991[6]
  • 1994, first Hispanic to win the O. Henry Prize for the story “The Latin Deli”[6]
  • 1995, An Island Like You: Stories of the Barrio was named one of the best books of the year for young adults by the American Library Association[6]
  • 1995, University of Georgia's J. Hatten Howard III award, which recognizes faculty members who demonstrate notable potential in teaching Honors courses early in their teaching careers.[6]
  • 1996, Ortiz Cofer and illustrator Susan Guevara became the first recipients of the Pura Belpre Award for Hispanic children's literature.[15]
  • 1998, University of Georgia's Albert Christ-Janer Award[6]
  • 1999, Franklin Professorship[6]
  • 2006, Regents Professor Recognition[6]
  • 2007, Mentor Achievement Award, from the Association of Writers and Writing Programs[6]
  • 2010, Georgia Writers Hall of Fame induction[16]
  • 2011, Georgia Governor's Award in the Humanities
  • 2013, University of Georgia's 2013 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award. This honor celebrates one faculty member from each SEC school and carries a $5,000 prize.[6]

Literary work edit

Ortiz Cofer's work can largely be classified as creative nonfiction. Her narrative self is strongly influenced by oral storytelling, which was inspired by her grandmother, an able storyteller in the tradition of teaching through storytelling among Puerto Rican women. Ortiz Cofer's autobiographical work often focuses on her attempts at negotiating her life between two cultures, American and Puerto Rican, and how this process informs her sensibilities as a writer. Her work also explores such subjects as racism and sexism in American culture, machismo and female empowerment in Puerto Rican culture, and the challenges diasporic immigrants face in a new culture. Among Ortiz Cofer's more well known essays are "The Story of My Body" and "The Myth of the Latin Woman," both reprinted in The Latin Deli.

A central theme Ortiz Cofer returns to repeatedly is language and the power of words to create and shape identities and worlds. Growing up, Ortiz Cofer's home language was Spanish. In school, she encountered English, which became her functional language and the language she wrote in. Early in her life, Ortiz Cofer realized her "main weapon in life was communication," and to survive, she would have to become fluent in the language spoken where she lived.[17]

Ortiz Cofer believes that what it is important in life is not the event but the memory that these events produce. It was these memories that we as humans cling onto and our mind warp into how we would like to perceive these events. Ortiz Cofer tested her theory by asking both her mother and her brother to recall the same event. When both of them gave a different account of the same event, she came to the realization that a person's memory of an event is based on many other factors, such as gender, race and even emotional situation. This phenomenon became the basis of her writing. Ortiz Cofer had written many different things within her time, such as personal essays, poems, and even novels. In each of her works, she stresses the fact that this is her own rendition of the truth and that everyone remembers an event differently. In her own words, she says, “If anyone objected I assured them that it wasn't my intent to defame them or warp the truth, but to give my rendition of it. My intent was poetic rather than genealogical.”[7]

Major works edit

The Latin Deli edit

The Latin Deli is a collection of poetry, personal essays, and short fiction. These stories have one central subject, the Latinos who live within the United States. While these Latinos, while coming from different backgrounds, are all interconnected by their roots being embedded within through collective roots in Europe, Africa, and the New World. One of the major aspects of the work is that "the qualities uniformness and uniqueness are not mutually exclusive, and that the memories of the past and hopes for the future can be intertwined on a daily basis." Ortiz Cofer conveys this by using the lives of Puerto Ricans in a New Jersey barrio. This is directly parallel to her own upbringing in the United States.[18]

Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood edit

Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood is a collection of essays and poems that detail Ortiz Cofer's childhood. She goes from her village in Puerto Rico to her life within Paterson, New Jersey. She goes over what children of military parents must face, as she did with her father being in the U.S. Navy. Like many Puerto Ricans, her father left the island in hope of having a better life. Furthermore, there is this them of split loyalties, where Ortiz Cofer feels confused between her loyalty to the United States, the place where she grew up, and her loyalty to Puerto Rico, her own birthplace. This is a common issue with many Puerto Ricans.

In a review in The San Francisco Examiner, Carmen Vazquez wrote of Silent Dancing :

Blending poetry and prose that is clear, precise and sometimes shimmering, Cofer transforms snatches of memory her grandmother's fables, a handsome and philandering uncle's visit, a Christmas feast in Puerto Rico, the appearance of her Navy father in white uniform under a street lamp, the loneliness of an older gay man, the poignancy and passion of young lovers courting without touching — into a stream of sound, color, and words ... The straightforward, non-spectacular character, of Cofer's memoirs is refreshing ... This book is a treasure, a secret dpor opening onto memories locked away long ago.[19]

An Island Like You: Stories of the Barrio edit

An Island Like You: Stories of the Barrio is a collection of twelve short stories following a cast of Puerto Rican teenage characters in a New Jersey barrio. The stories are written for a young adult audience. Like many of Ortiz Cofer's famous works, An Island Like You: Stories of the Barrio draws upon her upbringing as a Puerto Rican teenager in the United States. The collection was named one of the best books of the year young adults by the American Library Association in 1994[6] It also won the first ever Pura Belpré medal for narrative in 1996.[20] The 12 stories take place in the same neighborhood, and often intertwine, though each has an independent plot. Some of the characters appear in more than one story, allowing the reader to see them from both their own perspective, and the perspective of another character.[21]

In a review in The Sacramento Bee, Judy Green wrote:

Each of the 12 short stories in Judith Ortiz Cofer’s An Island Like You vibrates with the intense emotions of a young teenager on the edge of growing up. That most of the stories occur in the Puerto Rican barrio of Paterson, N.J., makes little difference because each pivots on a universal point: self-discovery, tolerance, family loyalty ... Cofer's astute eye and ear for life in El Building and on the island come naturally. Readers will find her vigorous characters keep talking long after their stories end.[22]

The Line of the Sun edit

The Line of the Sun is a novel published in 1989 which tells the story of a Puerto Rican family from the late 1930s to the 1960s. A Spanish translation of the novel titled La Línea del Sol was also published in 1996. The first half of the novel follows the family's lives in Puerto Rico, and centers on the character Uncle Guzmán. The second half of the novel is narrated by Marisol, the eldest daughter of the family. In this half, the family moves from Puerto Rico to a tenement in Paterson, New Jersey, and eventually to the New Jersey suburbs.[23] This novel is based on Ortiz Cofer's own life, but includes fictional elements as well. The novel explores the theme of cultural identity, and gives a realistic illustration of the Puerto Rican migrant experience.

Daniel Corrie, writing in The Atlanta Constitution, praised the novel:

The story's opening half unfolds on the Latino island of peasant machismo and teenage wives whose beauty is soon marred by child-bearing and hard work ... Lush with the sights, sounds and smells of this world of cane fields and coffee plantations, the novel's clean, lyrical prose often reminds the reader that the novel's author is also the author of two books of poetry ... In Paterson, the islanders are "wetbacks" who keep to El Building as though it were a country unto itself where they hang onto customs of their native land. The young narrator is doubly isolated by the influence of her aloof and protective father ... Besides being a valuable chronicle of cultures, The Line of the Sun is ... a strong portrayal of childhood and womanhood.[24]

List of works edit

Multi-genre works edit

  • The Latin Deli: Prose and Poetry (1993), U of Georgia Press, ISBN 978-0820315560.[25] Second edition: (2010), University of Georgia Press, ISBN 9780820336213
  • The Year of Our Revolution: New and Selected Stories and Poems (1998), Arte Publico Press, ISBN 1558852247
  • Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood (1990)
  • American History (1993)

Poetry edit

  • A Love Story Beginning in Spanish (2005), University of Georgia Press, ISBN 0820327425
  • Reaching for the Mainland and Selected New Poems (1995), Bilingual Press, ISBN 092753455X
  • Terms of Survival (1987), Arte Publico Press, ISBN 1558850791
  • Judith Speaks of the Death of Holoferness, Kalliope, ISSN 0735-7885[26]
  • Salome Remembers John the Baptist, Kalliope, ISSN 0735-7885[26]
  • What the Gypsy Said to Her Children, in "Woman of Her Word: Hispanic Women Write" (1983), Reprinted in "Making Face, Making Soul = Haciendo Caras: Creative Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color" (1990) ISBN 1879960117 [27]

Prose edit

  • The Line of the Sun (1989), University of Georgia Press, ISBN 0820313351

Works on writing edit

  • Lessons from a Writer's Life: Readings and Resources for Teachers and Students (2011), co-authored by Harvey Daniels, Penny Kittle, Carol Jago, and Judith Ortiz Cofer, Heinemann, ISBN 0325031460
  • Woman in Front of the Sun: On Becoming A Writer (2000), University of Georgia Press, ISBN 0820322423
  • Sleeping with One Eye Open: Women Writers and the Art of Survival (1999), editor Marilyn Kallet, University of Georgia Press, ISBN 0820321532
  • Conversations with the World: American Women Poets and Their Work (1998), contributor Toi Derricotte, Trilogy Books, ISBN 0962387991

Young adult literature edit

  • If I Could Fly (2011), Farrar, Straus and Giroux, ISBN 0374335176
  • Call Me Maria (2004), Scholastic, ISBN 0439385784
  • The Meaning of Consuelo (2003), Farrar, Straus and Giroux, ISBN B008AFRU8W
  • Riding Low on the Streets of Gold; Latino Literature for Young Adults (2003), Arte Publico Press, ISBN 1558853804
  • An Island Like You: Stories of the Barrio (1995), Scholastic, ISBN 0531068978

Children's books edit

  • The Poet Upstairs (2012), illustrated by Oscar Ortiz, Piñata Books, ISBN 1558857044
  • Animal Jamboree/La Fiesta De Los Animales: Latino Folktales / Leyendas (2012), Piñata Books, ISBN 1558857435
  • A Bailar!/Let's Dance (2011), illustrated by Christina Ann Rodriguez, Piñata Books, ISBN 1558856986

Pamphlets edit

  • The Native Dancer (1995), ASIN: B00I6G9STO
  • Peregrina (1986), Poets of the Foothills Art Center, Riverstone Press, ISBN 0936600063
  • Latin Women Pray (1980), The Florida Arts Gazette Press, ASIN: B008A2A5GY

Contributions edit

  • Triple Crown: Chicano, Puerto Rican, and Cuban-American Poetry (1997), Bilingual Press, ISBN 0916950719
  • The Mercury Reader, A Custom Publication (2005), Pearson Custom Publishing, ISBN 053699840X
  • Quixote Quarterly, Summer 1994 (Vol. 1, No. 1), Chuck Eisman, ISBN 0964219808
  • The Kenyon Review, Summer / Fall 1998 (Vol. 20, No. 3/4). Kenyon College, ASIN: B001NODMH0

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Judith Ortiz Cofer". poetryfoundation.org. Retrieved 2016-01-04.
  2. ^ Taylor Funeral Homes; Louisville, Georgia (no date). "Memorial Page for Judith Cofer (Ortiz)". "Mrs. Judith Ortiz Cofer, age 64 … died Friday morning, December 30, 2016 at her residence… Judith was a prolific literary writer in multiple genres, and received many awards for her writing and teaching." Retrieved December 30, 2016.
  3. ^ "Georgia Writers Hall of Fame". Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. December 30, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2022.
  4. ^ "Judith Ortiz Cofer". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved August 25, 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Williams and Cofer to be inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame". UGA Today. 2009-10-01. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fahmy, Sam (10 April 2013). "Noted author Judith Ortiz Cofer receives SEC Faculty Achievement Award". UGA Today. University of Georgia. Retrieved 18 September 2014.
  7. ^ a b Gordon, Stephanie (October–November 1997). "An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer" (PDF). AWP Chronicle. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Georgia Writers Hall of Fame". www.georgiawritershalloffame.org. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  9. ^ Foundation, Poetry (2023-05-11). "Judith Ortiz Cofer". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2023-05-11.
  10. ^ "Call Me Maria". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  11. ^ "Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican…". Goodreads. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  12. ^ "Judith Ortiz Cofer (1952-2016)".
  13. ^ Cofer, Judith (June 2014). "Reading".
  14. ^ Alioto, Suzanne (October 8, 1981). "Poet strives to attain her own high standards". The Miami Herald. p. N1. Retrieved October 2, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Hispanic Firsts", By; Nicolas Kanellos, publisher Visible Ink Press; ISBN 0-7876-0519-0; p.40
  16. ^ . Online Athens. Athens Banner Herald. September 19, 2009. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  17. ^ Ocasio, Rafael (1992). "Puerto Rican Literature in Georgia? An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer" (PDF). Kenyon Review. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  18. ^ "Judith Cofer Ortiz: "The Latin American Deli: An Ars Poetica"". ccat.sas.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2019-05-06.
  19. ^ Vazquez, Carmen (October 7, 1990). "Puerto Rican Roots". The San Francisco Examiner. p. Review 9. Retrieved October 1, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ admin (1999-11-30). "The Pura Belpré Award winners, 1996-present". Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC). Retrieved 2019-05-10.
  21. ^ Cofer, Judith Ortiz, 1952- (2009) [1995]. An island like you : stories of the barrio. Scholastic, Inc. ISBN 9780545131339. OCLC 435630838.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ Green, Judy (June 24, 1995). "Collection of short stories speaks volumes". The Sacramento Bee. p. G7. Retrieved October 2, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ Cofer, Judith Ortiz, 1952- (1991). The Line of the Sun. University of Georgia. ISBN 0820313351. OCLC 59892672.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Corrie, Daniel (July 2, 1989). "Author's Lyrical Prose Chronicles Cultures". The Atlanta Constitution. p. N-8. Retrieved October 2, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  25. ^ The Latin Deli: Prose and Poetry. OCLC 27223987.
  26. ^ a b "Judith Speaks of the Death of Holofernes". Kalliope: A Journal of Women's Art. 6 (2). Florida Junior College: 56–57. 1 June 1984.
  27. ^ Ortiz Cofer, Judith (1990). Anzaldúa, Gloria E. (ed.). Making face, making soul = Haciendo caras: Creative critical perspectives by feminists of color (1 ed.). San Francisco, CA: Aunt Lute Books. (Reprinted from E. Vigil (Ed.), "Woman of her word: Hispanic women write," 1983, Arte Público Press. xi, 3–4).). p. 3. ISBN 1879960117. Retrieved 11 December 2022.

External links edit

  • New Georgia Encyclopedia article on Judith Ortiz Cofer
  • Judith Ortiz Cofer's website at the University of Georgia

judith, ortiz, cofer, february, 1952, december, 2016, puerto, rican, author, critically, acclaimed, award, winning, work, spans, range, literary, genres, including, poetry, short, stories, autobiography, essays, young, adult, fiction, ortiz, cofer, emeritus, r. Judith Ortiz Cofer February 24 1952 December 30 2016 2 was a Puerto Rican author 3 4 Her critically acclaimed and award winning work spans a range of literary genres including poetry short stories autobiography essays and young adult fiction Ortiz Cofer was the Emeritus Regents and Franklin Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Georgia where she taught undergraduate and graduate creative writing workshops for 26 years In 2010 Ortiz Cofer was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame 5 and in 2013 she won the university s 2014 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award 6 Judith Ortiz CoferJudith Ortiz CoferBornJudith Ortiz 1952 02 24 February 24 1952Hormigueros Puerto RicoDiedDecember 30 2016 2016 12 30 aged 64 Louisville Georgia U S 1 OccupationWriter professor at the University of GeorgiaNationalityPuerto RicanEducationAugusta College BA Florida Atlantic University MA GenrePoetry short stories autobiography essays young adult novelsNotable worksA Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood Ortiz Cofer hailed from a family of storytellers and drew heavily from her personal experiences as a Puerto Rican American woman 7 In her work Ortiz Cofer brings a poetic perspective to the intersection of memory and imagination Writing in diverse genres she investigated women issues Latino culture and the American South Ortiz Cofer s work weaves together private life and public space through intimate portrayals of family relationships and rich descriptions of place Her own papers are currently housed at the University of Georgia s Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library 6 Contents 1 Early years 2 Academic and literary career 3 Artistic and academic contributions 4 Death 5 Awards and honors 6 Literary work 7 Major works 7 1 The Latin Deli 7 2 Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood 7 3 An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio 7 4 The Line of the Sun 8 List of works 8 1 Multi genre works 8 2 Poetry 8 3 Prose 8 4 Works on writing 8 5 Young adult literature 8 6 Children s books 8 7 Pamphlets 8 8 Contributions 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly years editJudith Ortiz Cofer was born to Jesus Lugo Ortiz and Fanny Morot in Hormigueros Puerto Rico on February 24 1952 8 She moved to Paterson New Jersey with her family in 1956 Morot gave birth to Judith Ortiz Cofer when she was fifteen years old 9 They believed they would have more opportunities for young parents in America Despite Lugo s passion for academia he left school and joined the U S Navy He was stationed in Panama when his daughter was born He met Judith Ortiz Cofer for the first time two years later Call Me Maria is a young adult novel that was published in 2004 10 It focuses on a teenage girl s transition from Puerto Rico to New York City They often made back and forth trips between Paterson and Hormigueros Ortiz Cofer reflects on these trips in her memoir Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood 11 stating they were annoying to both her education and her social life While she was primarily educated in Paterson New Jersey she attended local schools in Puerto Rico while she was there 12 While in Puerto Rico Ortiz Cofer would stay in the home of her grandmother Her transition between Puerto Rico and New Jersey greatly influenced her writing because she was able to contrast the two cultures In 1967 when Ortiz Cofer was fifteen her family moved to Augusta Georgia where she lived until her death in 2016 There she attended Butler High School Judith and her brother Ronaldo initially resisted the family s move South Upon arriving in Georgia however Ortiz Cofer was struck by Augusta s vibrant colors and vegetation compared with the gray concrete and skies of city life in Paterson 13 Academic and literary career editOrtiz Cofer received a B A in English from Augusta College and later an M A in English literature from Florida Atlantic University Early in her writing career Ortiz Cofer won fellowships from Oxford University and the Bread Loaf Writers Conference which enabled her to begin developing her multi genre body of work Cofer was fluent in English and Spanish and worked as a bilingual teacher in the public schools of Palm Beach County Florida during the 1974 1975 school year After she received her master s degree and published her first collection of poems she became a lecturer in English at the University of Miami at Coral Gables 14 In 1984 Ortiz Cofer joined the faculty of the University of Georgia as the Franklin Professor of English and Creative Writing 5 After 26 years of teaching undergraduate and graduate students Ortiz Cofer retired from the University of Georgia in December 2013 8 Ortiz Cofer is best known for creative nonfiction works but she has worked in poetry short fiction children s books and personal narrative Cofer began her writing career with poetry which she believed contained the essence of language One of her earliest books was Peregrina 1986 which won the Riverstone International Chapbook Competition She has received various awards such as grants from the Witter Bynner Foundation and the Georgia Council for the Arts as well as fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts for poetry the Bread Loaf Writers Conference and the Florida Fine Arts Council In 2010 Ortiz Cofer was admitted to the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame Artistic and academic contributions editOrtiz Cofer s writing encompasses themes that emphasize the integration of cultural heritage and individual identity through the arts She started the literary journal Review with the intention of giving marginalized writers a voice and promoting their writing Additionally Ortiz Cofer contributed to a number of literary anthologies including as the well known The Norton Introduction to Literature which is frequently used in college curriculum She supervised creative writing students while teaching writing at the University of Georgia Florida Atlantic University and Rutgers University during her career Along with writing and teaching Ortiz Cofer also followed her interest for music by learning to play the guitar and penning songs She frequently performed musically at conferences and literary gatherings to compliment her passion of reading citation needed Death editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message In July 2014 Ortiz Cofer was diagnosed with a rare type of liver cancer shortly after her retirement She died on December 30 2016 at her home in Jefferson County Georgia A memorial service was held on January 27 2017 followed by a reception at the Demosthenian Hall She is buried in the Louisville City Cemetery Georgia Awards and honors edit1986 Riverstone International Chapbook Competition for her first collection of poems Peregrina 6 1990 Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood received the PEN Martha Albrand Special Citation in Nonfiction 6 1990 the essay More Room was awarded the Pushcart Prize which celebrates work published by small presses 6 1991 the essay Silent Dancing was selected for The Best American Essays 1991 6 1994 first Hispanic to win the O Henry Prize for the story The Latin Deli 6 1995 An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio was named one of the best books of the year for young adults by the American Library Association 6 1995 University of Georgia s J Hatten Howard III award which recognizes faculty members who demonstrate notable potential in teaching Honors courses early in their teaching careers 6 1996 Ortiz Cofer and illustrator Susan Guevara became the first recipients of the Pura Belpre Award for Hispanic children s literature 15 1998 University of Georgia s Albert Christ Janer Award 6 1999 Franklin Professorship 6 2006 Regents Professor Recognition 6 2007 Mentor Achievement Award from the Association of Writers and Writing Programs 6 2010 Georgia Writers Hall of Fame induction 16 2011 Georgia Governor s Award in the Humanities 2013 University of Georgia s 2013 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award This honor celebrates one faculty member from each SEC school and carries a 5 000 prize 6 Literary work editOrtiz Cofer s work can largely be classified as creative nonfiction Her narrative self is strongly influenced by oral storytelling which was inspired by her grandmother an able storyteller in the tradition of teaching through storytelling among Puerto Rican women Ortiz Cofer s autobiographical work often focuses on her attempts at negotiating her life between two cultures American and Puerto Rican and how this process informs her sensibilities as a writer Her work also explores such subjects as racism and sexism in American culture machismo and female empowerment in Puerto Rican culture and the challenges diasporic immigrants face in a new culture Among Ortiz Cofer s more well known essays are The Story of My Body and The Myth of the Latin Woman both reprinted in The Latin Deli A central theme Ortiz Cofer returns to repeatedly is language and the power of words to create and shape identities and worlds Growing up Ortiz Cofer s home language was Spanish In school she encountered English which became her functional language and the language she wrote in Early in her life Ortiz Cofer realized her main weapon in life was communication and to survive she would have to become fluent in the language spoken where she lived 17 Ortiz Cofer believes that what it is important in life is not the event but the memory that these events produce It was these memories that we as humans cling onto and our mind warp into how we would like to perceive these events Ortiz Cofer tested her theory by asking both her mother and her brother to recall the same event When both of them gave a different account of the same event she came to the realization that a person s memory of an event is based on many other factors such as gender race and even emotional situation This phenomenon became the basis of her writing Ortiz Cofer had written many different things within her time such as personal essays poems and even novels In each of her works she stresses the fact that this is her own rendition of the truth and that everyone remembers an event differently In her own words she says If anyone objected I assured them that it wasn t my intent to defame them or warp the truth but to give my rendition of it My intent was poetic rather than genealogical 7 Major works editThe Latin Deli edit The Latin Deli is a collection of poetry personal essays and short fiction These stories have one central subject the Latinos who live within the United States While these Latinos while coming from different backgrounds are all interconnected by their roots being embedded within through collective roots in Europe Africa and the New World One of the major aspects of the work is that the qualities uniformness and uniqueness are not mutually exclusive and that the memories of the past and hopes for the future can be intertwined on a daily basis Ortiz Cofer conveys this by using the lives of Puerto Ricans in a New Jersey barrio This is directly parallel to her own upbringing in the United States 18 Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood edit Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood is a collection of essays and poems that detail Ortiz Cofer s childhood She goes from her village in Puerto Rico to her life within Paterson New Jersey She goes over what children of military parents must face as she did with her father being in the U S Navy Like many Puerto Ricans her father left the island in hope of having a better life Furthermore there is this them of split loyalties where Ortiz Cofer feels confused between her loyalty to the United States the place where she grew up and her loyalty to Puerto Rico her own birthplace This is a common issue with many Puerto Ricans In a review in The San Francisco Examiner Carmen Vazquez wrote of Silent Dancing Blending poetry and prose that is clear precise and sometimes shimmering Cofer transforms snatches of memory her grandmother s fables a handsome and philandering uncle s visit a Christmas feast in Puerto Rico the appearance of her Navy father in white uniform under a street lamp the loneliness of an older gay man the poignancy and passion of young lovers courting without touching into a stream of sound color and words The straightforward non spectacular character of Cofer s memoirs is refreshing This book is a treasure a secret dpor opening onto memories locked away long ago 19 An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio edit An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio is a collection of twelve short stories following a cast of Puerto Rican teenage characters in a New Jersey barrio The stories are written for a young adult audience Like many of Ortiz Cofer s famous works An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio draws upon her upbringing as a Puerto Rican teenager in the United States The collection was named one of the best books of the year young adults by the American Library Association in 1994 6 It also won the first ever Pura Belpre medal for narrative in 1996 20 The 12 stories take place in the same neighborhood and often intertwine though each has an independent plot Some of the characters appear in more than one story allowing the reader to see them from both their own perspective and the perspective of another character 21 In a review in The Sacramento Bee Judy Green wrote Each of the 12 short stories in Judith Ortiz Cofer s An Island Like You vibrates with the intense emotions of a young teenager on the edge of growing up That most of the stories occur in the Puerto Rican barrio of Paterson N J makes little difference because each pivots on a universal point self discovery tolerance family loyalty Cofer s astute eye and ear for life in El Building and on the island come naturally Readers will find her vigorous characters keep talking long after their stories end 22 The Line of the Sun edit The Line of the Sun is a novel published in 1989 which tells the story of a Puerto Rican family from the late 1930s to the 1960s A Spanish translation of the novel titled La Linea del Sol was also published in 1996 The first half of the novel follows the family s lives in Puerto Rico and centers on the character Uncle Guzman The second half of the novel is narrated by Marisol the eldest daughter of the family In this half the family moves from Puerto Rico to a tenement in Paterson New Jersey and eventually to the New Jersey suburbs 23 This novel is based on Ortiz Cofer s own life but includes fictional elements as well The novel explores the theme of cultural identity and gives a realistic illustration of the Puerto Rican migrant experience Daniel Corrie writing in The Atlanta Constitution praised the novel The story s opening half unfolds on the Latino island of peasant machismo and teenage wives whose beauty is soon marred by child bearing and hard work Lush with the sights sounds and smells of this world of cane fields and coffee plantations the novel s clean lyrical prose often reminds the reader that the novel s author is also the author of two books of poetry In Paterson the islanders are wetbacks who keep to El Building as though it were a country unto itself where they hang onto customs of their native land The young narrator is doubly isolated by the influence of her aloof and protective father Besides being a valuable chronicle of cultures The Line of the Sun is a strong portrayal of childhood and womanhood 24 List of works editMulti genre works edit The Latin Deli Prose and Poetry 1993 U of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0820315560 25 Second edition 2010 University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820336213 The Year of Our Revolution New and Selected Stories and Poems 1998 Arte Publico Press ISBN 1558852247 Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood 1990 American History 1993 Poetry edit A Love Story Beginning in Spanish 2005 University of Georgia Press ISBN 0820327425 Reaching for the Mainland and Selected New Poems 1995 Bilingual Press ISBN 092753455X Terms of Survival 1987 Arte Publico Press ISBN 1558850791 Judith Speaks of the Death of Holoferness Kalliope ISSN 0735 7885 26 Salome Remembers John the Baptist Kalliope ISSN 0735 7885 26 What the Gypsy Said to Her Children in Woman of Her Word Hispanic Women Write 1983 Reprinted in Making Face Making Soul Haciendo Caras Creative Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color 1990 ISBN 1879960117 27 Prose edit The Line of the Sun 1989 University of Georgia Press ISBN 0820313351 Works on writing edit Lessons from a Writer s Life Readings and Resources for Teachers and Students 2011 co authored by Harvey Daniels Penny Kittle Carol Jago and Judith Ortiz Cofer Heinemann ISBN 0325031460 Woman in Front of the Sun On Becoming A Writer 2000 University of Georgia Press ISBN 0820322423 Sleeping with One Eye Open Women Writers and the Art of Survival 1999 editor Marilyn Kallet University of Georgia Press ISBN 0820321532 Conversations with the World American Women Poets and Their Work 1998 contributor Toi Derricotte Trilogy Books ISBN 0962387991 Young adult literature edit If I Could Fly 2011 Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0374335176 Call Me Maria 2004 Scholastic ISBN 0439385784 The Meaning of Consuelo 2003 Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN B008AFRU8W Riding Low on the Streets of Gold Latino Literature for Young Adults 2003 Arte Publico Press ISBN 1558853804 An Island Like You Stories of the Barrio 1995 Scholastic ISBN 0531068978 Children s books edit The Poet Upstairs 2012 illustrated by Oscar Ortiz Pinata Books ISBN 1558857044 Animal Jamboree La Fiesta De Los Animales Latino Folktales Leyendas 2012 Pinata Books ISBN 1558857435 A Bailar Let s Dance 2011 illustrated by Christina Ann Rodriguez Pinata Books ISBN 1558856986 Pamphlets edit The Native Dancer 1995 ASIN B00I6G9STO Peregrina 1986 Poets of the Foothills Art Center Riverstone Press ISBN 0936600063 Latin Women Pray 1980 The Florida Arts Gazette Press ASIN B008A2A5GY Contributions edit Triple Crown Chicano Puerto Rican and Cuban American Poetry 1997 Bilingual Press ISBN 0916950719 The Mercury Reader A Custom Publication 2005 Pearson Custom Publishing ISBN 053699840X Quixote Quarterly Summer 1994 Vol 1 No 1 Chuck Eisman ISBN 0964219808 The Kenyon Review Summer Fall 1998 Vol 20 No 3 4 Kenyon College ASIN B001NODMH0See also edit nbsp Puerto Rico portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Literature portal nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Judith Ortiz Cofer The Myth of the Latin Woman List of Puerto Rican writers List of Puerto Ricans Puerto Rican literatureReferences edit Judith Ortiz Cofer poetryfoundation org Retrieved 2016 01 04 Taylor Funeral Homes Louisville Georgia no date Memorial Page for Judith Cofer Ortiz Mrs Judith Ortiz Cofer age 64 died Friday morning December 30 2016 at her residence Judith was a prolific literary writer in multiple genres and received many awards for her writing and teaching Retrieved December 30 2016 Georgia Writers Hall of Fame Georgia Writers Hall of Fame December 30 2016 Retrieved August 25 2022 Judith Ortiz Cofer Fantastic Fiction Retrieved August 25 2022 a b Williams and Cofer to be inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame UGA Today 2009 10 01 Retrieved 2022 08 20 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fahmy Sam 10 April 2013 Noted author Judith Ortiz Cofer receives SEC Faculty Achievement Award UGA Today University of Georgia Retrieved 18 September 2014 a b Gordon Stephanie October November 1997 An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer PDF AWP Chronicle Retrieved 8 October 2014 a b Georgia Writers Hall of Fame www georgiawritershalloffame org Retrieved 2022 08 20 Foundation Poetry 2023 05 11 Judith Ortiz Cofer Poetry Foundation Retrieved 2023 05 11 Call Me Maria www goodreads com Retrieved 2022 08 20 Silent Dancing A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Goodreads Retrieved 2022 08 20 Judith Ortiz Cofer 1952 2016 Cofer Judith June 2014 Reading Alioto Suzanne October 8 1981 Poet strives to attain her own high standards The Miami Herald p N1 Retrieved October 2 2021 via Newspapers com Hispanic Firsts By Nicolas Kanellos publisher Visible Ink Press ISBN 0 7876 0519 0 p 40 Writers hall picks four inductees Online Athens Athens Banner Herald September 19 2009 Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 20 September 2009 Ocasio Rafael 1992 Puerto Rican Literature in Georgia An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer PDF Kenyon Review Retrieved 9 October 2014 Judith Cofer Ortiz The Latin American Deli An Ars Poetica ccat sas upenn edu Retrieved 2019 05 06 Vazquez Carmen October 7 1990 Puerto Rican Roots The San Francisco Examiner p Review 9 Retrieved October 1 2021 via Newspapers com admin 1999 11 30 The Pura Belpre Award winners 1996 present Association for Library Service to Children ALSC Retrieved 2019 05 10 Cofer Judith Ortiz 1952 2009 1995 An island like you stories of the barrio Scholastic Inc ISBN 9780545131339 OCLC 435630838 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Green Judy June 24 1995 Collection of short stories speaks volumes The Sacramento Bee p G7 Retrieved October 2 2021 via Newspapers com Cofer Judith Ortiz 1952 1991 The Line of the Sun University of Georgia ISBN 0820313351 OCLC 59892672 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Corrie Daniel July 2 1989 Author s Lyrical Prose Chronicles Cultures The Atlanta Constitution p N 8 Retrieved October 2 2021 via Newspapers com The Latin Deli Prose and Poetry OCLC 27223987 a b Judith Speaks of the Death of Holofernes Kalliope A Journal of Women s Art 6 2 Florida Junior College 56 57 1 June 1984 Ortiz Cofer Judith 1990 Anzaldua Gloria E ed Making face making soul Haciendo caras Creative critical perspectives by feminists of color 1 ed San Francisco CA Aunt Lute Books Reprinted from E Vigil Ed Woman of her word Hispanic women write 1983 Arte Publico Press xi 3 4 p 3 ISBN 1879960117 Retrieved 11 December 2022 External links editNew Georgia Encyclopedia article on Judith Ortiz Cofer Judith Ortiz Cofer s website at the University of Georgia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judith Ortiz Cofer amp oldid 1214788628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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