Sylvia Lago Explained

Sylvia Lago
Birth Name:Sylvia Lago Carzolio
Birth Date:20 November 1932
Birth Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Occupation:Writer, teacher, literary critic

Sylvia Lago Carzolio (born 20 November 1932) is a Uruguayan writer, teacher, and literary critic. She has made a particular focus of women's issues, addressing various conflicts that women encounter in her work.[1] [2]

Biography

Sylvia Lago was born in Montevideo on 20 November 1932.[3] [4] Her great-aunt was professor Elda Lago, a member of the Generación del 45, who bequeathed her home to the University of the Republic (UdelaR).[5] Lago studied literature at the (IPA).[3] She carried out academic and scientific activities at the Department of Uruguayan and American Literature at UdelaR's Faculty of Humanities and Educational Sciences, eventually becoming its chair.[3] [6]

In 1962, she published her first work, the young adult novel Trajano, which won awards in contests organized by the magazine Número and the Departmental Council of Montevideo.[7] Three years later, she published another novel, Tan solos en el verano. It was followed by La última razón in 1968. Her output was limited in the years after the 1973 coup d'état; she mainly published short story collections, such as Detrás del rojo, Las flores conjuradas, and El corazón de la noche.[8]

In 1988, she published Quince cuentos para una antología. She also contributed to the anthologies Cuentos de nunca acabar (1992), Cuentos de atar (1993), and Erkundungen (1993), the latter in co-authorship with and Washington Benavides. Her 1995 book Días dorados, días en sombra contains works written between 1965 and 1995.

In 2002, her novel Saltos mortales won second prize at the Ministry of Education and Culture's annual literature contest.[9]

She has served as a juror for literary competitions such as the Colihue Young Adult Novel Contest and the Juan Carlos Onetti Literary Contest.[10] [11] [12]

Selected publications

Chapters of books

Notes and References

  1. Sylvia Lago: 'abracé la literatura con violencia y con pasión' . Sylvia Lago: 'I Embraced Literature With Violence and Passion' . LaRed21 . Spanish . 2008-01-06 . 2021-07-14.
  2. News: Se buscan narradoras, vivas y muertas . Women Storytellers Wanted, Dead or Alive . Alicia . Torres . . Spanish . 2019-12-27 . 2021-07-14.
  3. Boletín de la Academia Nacional de Letras . . 1 . 71 . Spanish . 1997 . 2021-07-14 . Google Books.
  4. Sylvia Lago: 'la literatura no tiene sexo, pero quienes la escriben sí' . Sylvia Lago: 'Literature Does Not Have Sex, But Those Who Write it Do' . Mónica . Flori . Espéculo. Revista de estudios literarios . . Spanish . 2002 . 2021-07-14.
  5. News: La herencia intelectual . The Intellectual Heritage . Gloria . Salbarrey . . Spanish . 2008-02-01 . 2021-07-14.
  6. News: La revista cultural bilingüe que dirige un salteño en Holanda . The Bilingual Cultural Magazine in the Netherlands Run by a Man From Salta . Diario El Pueblo . Spanish . 2011-02-20 . 2021-07-14.
  7. Book: Visca, Arturo S. . Antología del cuento uruguayo . Uruguayan Short Story Anthology . Sylvia Lago (1932) . Ediciones de la Banda Oriental . 1968 . Spanish . 2021-07-14 . Letras Uruguay.
  8. Book: Lago, Sylvia . El corazón de la noche . The Heart of the Night . Ediciones de la Banda Oriental . 5 . Spanish . 1987 . 2021-07-14 . Google Books.
  9. Se dio a conocer los ganadores del concurso anual de literatura . The Winners of the Annual Literature Contest . Julia . Galemire . La Onda Digital . Spanish . 2021-07-14.
  10. Book: Barberis, Alicia . Cruzar la noche . Concurso anual Colihue de novela juvenil 1995 . Annual Colihue Young Adult Novel Contest 1995 . Ediciones Colihue SRL . 9789505811281 . 9 . Spanish . 1996 . 2021-07-14 . Google Books.
  11. Web site: Resolución N° 2837/10 . . Spanish . 2010-06-28 . 2021-07-14.
  12. Web site: Se entregaron los Premios Onetti 2016 . The 2016 Onetti Awards Presented . . Spanish . 2016-09-29 . 2021-07-14.