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Cuba’s
Fina Garcia Marruz Awarded Queen Sophia Prize for Ibero-American
Poetry
HAVANA, Cuba, Apr 28 (acn) Cuban writer Fina Garcia Marruz has
been granted the 20th Queen Sophia Prize for Ibero-American
Poetry, one of the most important awards in this genre given by
the Spanish institution Patrimonio Nacional (National Heritage)
and the University of Salamanca, as announced on Thursday at the
Royal Palace of Madrid.
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Fina, born on April 28,
1923, has a degree on Social Sciences and she belonged to
the group of Cuban poets and writers of the renowned
magazine ‘Origenes’ (1944-1956), along with her late husband
Cintio Vitier, Jose Lezama Lima and Eliseo Diego.
Fina is one of Cuba’s most outstanding poets of all
times. She worked as a researcher at the Jose Marti National
Library and also at the Center of Studies on the Life and
Work of Jose Marti, where she was part of a team of authors
of a critical edition of the Complete Works of the Cuban
national hero. Some of her most important works include ‘Las
miradas perdidas’, ‘Viaje a Nicaragua’ and ‘Créditos de
Charlot’. In 1990, she received the National Prize for
Literature.
Some previous winners of the Queen Sophia Prize for
Ibero-American Poetry include Chilean Gonzalo Rojas (1992),
Spanish Jose Hierro (1995) and Francisco Brines (2010),
Uruguayan Mario Benedetti (1999) and Argentinean Juan Gelman
(2005).
The award recognizes a living author for the literary
value and contribution of his or her poetical works to the
common cultural patrimony of Ibero-America and Spain.
This year’s jury included personalities such as Brines;
Nicolas Martinez-Fresno, president of Patrimonio Nacional;
Daniel Hernandez, rector of the University of Salamanca; and
Jose Manuel Blecua, director of the Spanish Royal Academy.
The award is presented by Queen Sophia of Spain at the
Hall of Columns of the Royal Palace in Madrid.
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