Rosa Nissán Explained

Rosa Nissán
Birth Name:Rosa Nissán Rovero
Birth Date:June 15, 1939
Birth Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Occupation:Writer
Language:Spanish
Alma Mater:Women's University of Mexico
Genre:Novel
Notable Works:Novia que te vea
Awards:Ariel León Dultzin Award

Rosa Nissán Rovero (known as Rosa Nissán; born June 15, 1939) is a Mexican writer of Sephardic origin.[1] [2] She is the author of the novel Novia que te vea (1992), which was made into a movie.[3] She received the Ariel León Dultzin Award, from the Association of Israeli Journalists and Writers in Mexico, in 1994.[4] Her novels focus on the Sephardic Jewish population in Mexico and themes of Jewish womanhood. Her work has been noted for its inclusion of Ladino, commonly spoken by Sephardic Jews.[5]

Biography

Rosa Nissán Rovero was born in Mexico City on June 15, 1939. Her father and grandfather were emigrants from Jerusalem; her mother was a Sephardic Jew from Turkey.[6] She studied journalism at the Women's University of Mexico.

In 1992, she published her first novel Novia que te vea. It was made into a film, produced by Instituto Mexicano de Cinematografía and directed by, with a script co-written by Nissan and Hugo Hiriart. The novel addresses the issue of cultural integration of Jewish communities in Mexico and questions the traditional role of Jewish women, as well as the customs and traditions of the Sephardic community.[7] [8] [9]

In 1997, she published a chronicle of her trip to Israel in Spanish; Castilian: Las Tierras Prometidas (The Promised Lands). Two years later, her second novel was published, Hisho que te nazca, a continuation of Novia que te vea, and that same year, some short stories were also published in No sólo para dormir es la noche (Not only to sleep is the night), where she brings together a collection of stories in which the problems of partner and loneliness are determining factors.[10]

From 2000 to 2002, she gave various workshops on fictionalized autobiography in the Casa del Lago Juan José Arreola, at the University of the Cloister of Sor Juana. and the Casa del Refugio.

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rosa Nissan - Detalle del autor - Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México - FLM - CONACULTA . www.elem.mx . 12 March 2023 . es.
  2. Web site: Nissán . Rosa . Rosa Nissán . Enlace Judío . 12 March 2023 . es-MX.
  3. News: Rosa Nissán, Entre la autobiografía novelada y la identidad Sefaradí. Autora de Novia que te Vea, entre otros. . 12 March 2023 . diariojudio.com . 28 May 2014 . es.
  4. Web site: Escritores Sefaradíes: Rosa Nissán Rovero (México, 1939) . eSefarad . 12 March 2023 . es . 24 February 2017.
  5. Coonrod Martinez . Elizabeth . Rosa Nissan: Cultural Memory and the Mexican Sephardic Women . Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature . 2004 . 37 . 1 . 101–117 . 27 July 2024 . . en.
  6. Eli Gardner . Nathanial . Being Mexican: Identity, Location, and Rosa Nissán (I) . Amerika. Mémoires, identités, territoires . 20 December 2013 . 9 . 10.4000/amerika.4469 . en . 2107-0806.
  7. News: Bautista . Virginia . Rosa Nissán vuelve con 2 libros . 12 March 2023 . Excélsior . 16 November 2015 . es.
  8. Halevi-Wise . Yael . Puente entre naciones: idioma e identidad sefardí en Novia que te vea e Hisho que te nazca de Rosa Nissán . Hispania . 1998 . 81 . 2 . 269–277 . 10.2307/345015 . 345015 . 12 March 2023 . 0018-2133.
  9. Scott . Renée . La experiencia sefardí en Latinoamérica: Tres novelas de Teresa Porzecanski y Rosa Nissán . Sefarad . 30 December 1998 . 58 . 2 . 387–399 . 10.3989/sefarad.1998.v58.i2.826 . 159631093 . 12 March 2023 . es . 1988-320X. free .
  10. Encyclopedia: Obra publicada - Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México - FLM - CONACULTA . www.elem.mx . 12 March 2023 . es.