Victoria Cirlot Explained

Victoria Cirlot Valenzuela (born 1955), daughter of poet Juan Eduardo Cirlot, is a Spanish scholar of medieval culture and literature, philologist, translator and editor. She is a tenured professor of medieval literature and comparative literature at the Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona,[1] Celtic religion professor at the University of Barcelona, and professor of symbology at the Universitat Ramon Llull in the same city. She is co-editor of the collection El Árbol del Paraíso of Editorial Siruela (Madrid).[2] She is also a founding member of the Institut Universitari de Cultura and coordinator of the research team of the Biblioteca Mystica et Philosophica Alois M. Haas. Cirlot is a member of the Institut Carl Gustav Jung Barcelona. Some of her fields are the study of mysticism, symbology and the history of religions, as well as aesthetics of reception.[3] [4]

Cirlot was born in Barcelona to the poet Juan Eduardo Cirlot, whose book A Dictionary of Symbols she edited, and which contains an epilogue by her. Her sister is fellow professor Lourdes Cirlot.[5]

Works

References

  1. http://www.upf.edu/huma/es/directorio/cirlot.html UPF website
  2. http://www.siruela.com/novedades.php?&id_autor=558 Siruela
  3. http://www.institutcgjungbcn.cat/spanishweb/directorio.htm Institut Jung de Barcelona
  4. https://www.upf.edu/web/haas/entry/-/-/victoria_cirlot-upf_edu/adscripcion/victoria-cirlot Cirlot's academic CV at Biblioteca Mystica et Philosophica Alois M. Haas
  5. http://pendientedemigracion.ucm.es/info/especulo/numero4/cirlot.htm UCM.es

External links