Aurora Correa Explained

Aurora Correa
Birth Date:10 February 1930
Birth Place:Barcelona, Spain
Death Place:León, Guanajuato, Mexico
Nationality:Mexican
Occupation:Teacher, writer
Notable Works:Cerezas

Aurora Correa (February 10, 1930 – November 20, 2008) was a Spanish-born teacher and writer, a naturalized Mexican who was part of the group of exiles known as the (Spanish; Castilian: Niños de Morelia|links=no), which arrived in Mexico during the Spanish Civil War. In her 2008 book Cerezas, she narrates her experiences through the journey and exile.

Biography

Aurora Correa was born on February 10, 1930, in Barcelona. She arrived in Mexico in 1937, when she was 7 years old, as part of the group known as the, exiled during the Spanish Civil War. As many of these children never returned to their homeland, they remained in the country and became naturalized Mexicans in 1967.[1] [2]

Correa's professional work was always related to education, literature, and the dissemination of culture. She taught Spanish in high school, worked as a screenwriter, was a copywriter and editor of various publishing houses, and also a radio actress.[3] She wrote for print media such as El Día, , Excélsior, Novedades, and Siempre![3] [4] One such story, published in Novedades, narrates her experiences in the boarding school where she lived in childhood.[5]

She published six books, including La muerte de James Dean (1991) and Ha (1992), which were finalists in the Planeta and Diana novel competitions respectively.[3] Cerezas (2008), her last book, tells of her experiences as one of the Children of Morelia.[2] Only one of her books, Odas (1976), is dedicated to poetry, and her work in this genre is little-known.[6]

Aurora Correa died on November 20, 2008, in the city of León, Guanajuato.[1] [2]

Books

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aurora Correa . Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México . Secretariat of Culture, Fundación para las Letras Mexicanas . Spanish . 2019-07-10.
  2. Aurora Correa: De Barcelona a México en 1937 . Marcela . López Arellano . Revista Mexbcn . Spanish . https://web.archive.org/web/20180129143041/http://www.mexbcn.com/aurora-correa-de-barcelona-a-mexico-en-1937/ . 2018-01-29 . dead . 2019-07-10.
  3. Web site: Correa, Aurora (1930–2008) . Catálogo Biobibliográfico de la Literatura en México . . Spanish . 2019-07-10.
  4. Web site: Fallece Aurora Correa, destacada escritora e intelectual, hispanomexicana radicada en Aguascalientes . Aurora Correa, Distinguished Hispano-Mexican Writer and Intellectual Based in Aguascalientes, Passes Away . . Spanish . 2008-11-21 . 2019-07-10.
  5. Book: Forum, Issues 152-162 . Reproducciones Montesinos . 154 . Spanish . 2006 . 2019-07-10 . Google Books.
  6. Identidad(es) literaria(s): el exilio en las poetas hispanomexicanas . Katia Irina . Ibarra Guerrero . Mariana . Masera . Revista Valenciana . 2448-7295 . 20 . 113–136 . Spanish . July–December 2017 . 10.15174/rv.v0i20.293 . 2019-07-10 . Dialnet. free .
  7. Web site: Obra publicada de Aurora Correa . Published Work of Aurora Correa . Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México . Secretariat of Culture, Fundación para las Letras Mexicanas . Spanish . 2019-07-10.