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Slideshow

Fractal Caribbean and the Notion of Self in Contemporary Puerto Rican, Dominican and Cuban Literature and Thought

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Sanford Hall, Room 313

 

LACSI cordially invites students, faculty, staff, and community members to a public lecture by Puerto Rican writer and scholar Mayra Santos Febres exploring Afro-Caribbean and Diasporic literature. Interested Graduate Students will have an opportunity to meet with Dr. Santos Febres separately on January 15.

Mayra Santos Febres Visit to UGA - January 14-17th, 2020.

Meeting with Graduate Students:  Wednesday, January 15, 2020:  2:30-4pm.  Room TBA

General Lecture:  Thursday, January 16, 2020:  Sanford 313:  12:30-1:45pm

 

Brief Author Bio

Mayra Santos-Febres is an award winning contemporary Puerto Rican writer, literary critic, essayist, radio and television personality  and community activist whose work spans multiple genres  that include  poetry, short story, novella, novel and essay.  Santos Febres received her Masters and PhD from Cornell University  and has taught in Puerto Rico ,  the United States, and Europe  in institutions such as  the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras campus, Cornell University and Harvard University.  She has been recognized both in Puerto Rico and internationally for her work, receiving the 1994 Letras de Oro Prize (for her short story collection Pez de Vidrio /Urban Oracles)  and  the 1997 Juan Rulfo Prize.     In 2007 her novel Cualquier miércoles soy tuya /Any Wednesday I’m Yours  was longlisted for the IMPAC International Dublin Literary Award and in 2007 her third novel Nuestra Señora de la noche was awarded Puerto Rico’s 2007 Premio Nacional de Literatura.  In  2009  Santos Febres  was awarded the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship for the Humanities. Her work has been translated into multiple languages, including English, Italian , French, German, Croatian and Icelandic and has been the subject of multiple dissertations, full length studies and essays, including a  special volume on Sirena Selena  published in 2003 (Vol. XV, No. 1, 2003)  by the Centro Journal from the  Center for Puerto Rican Studies fro the City University of New York.

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