María Zambrano
María Zambrano | |
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Nationality | Spanish |
Notable work | El hombre y lo divino [Man and the divine], La Confesión [The Confession] |
Religion | Christian |
Awards | Príncipe de Asturias Award, Cervantes Award |
Main interests | poetry, mysticism, nihilism, religion, the human |
Notable ideas | poetical reason |
Influences
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Influenced
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María Zambrano Alarcón (22 April 1904, in Vélez-Málaga – 6 February 1991, in Madrid) was a Spanish essayist and philosopher associated with the Generation of '36 movement.
Zambrano studied under and was influenced by José Ortega y Gasset and went on to teach metaphysics at Madrid University and at the Instituto Cervantes from 1931 to 1936. Her involvement in the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939 caused her exile when Franco came to power.
After living in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Italy, France and Switzerland, Zambrano finally returned to Madrid in 1984.
Recognition
Highly respected by her peers, she maintained contact with Italian intellectuals as well as her compatriots Rafael Alberti and Jorge Guillén.
A slow process of recognition of her work commenced in Spain in 1966 with the publication of J. L. Aranguren's article "Los sueños de María Zambrano" (María Zambrano's Dreams) in the important cultural and scientific Revista de Occidente, founded by Ortega y Gasset, a review to which leading contemporary philosophers such as Bertrand Russell and Edmund Husserl contributed.
In 1981 she was awarded the Prince of Asturias Award for Communications and Humanities in its first edition, and in 1983 Malaga University named her Doctor honoris causa.
In 1988 she became the first woman to be awarded the Miguel de Cervantes Prize.
María querida (Dearest Maria), a film directed by José Luis García Sánchez in 2004, is about her life.
In December 2007, when the Málaga-Madrid high speed railway line was opened, the railway company RENFE renamed Málaga Railway Station "María Zambrano".
Bibliography
Library resources about María Zambrano |
By María Zambrano |
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Selected primary literature:
- Horizontes del liberalismo (The Horizons of Liberalism) (1930).
- Hacia un saber del alma (1934).
- Filosofia y poesía (Philosophy and Poetry) (1940).
- La agonía de Europa (The Agony of Europe) (1945).
- Hacia un saber sobre al alma (Towards a Knowledge of the Soul) (1950).
- El hombre y lo divino (1955).
- Persona y democracia (Person and Democracy) (1959).
- La tumba de Antígones (Antigones's Tomb) (1967).
- Claros del bosque (1977).
- De la aurora (1986).
- El reposo de la luz (1986).
- Para una historia de la piedad (1989).
- Delirio y destino (written in 1953; published in 1989), translated by Carol Maier, with a commentary by Roberta Johnson, Delirium and Destiny: A Spaniard in Her Twenties (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1999).
- Unamuno (written in 1940; published in 2003).
- Cartas de la Pièce. Correspondencia con Agustín Andreu (2002).
- Islas (Islands) (Ed. Jorge Luis Arcos) (2007).
Secondary literature:
- Bush, Andrew."María Zambrano and the Survival of Antigone," diacritics 34 (3–4) (2004): 90–111.
- Caballero, Beatriz. "La centralidad del concepto de delirio en el pensamiento de María Zambrano," Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies (12) (2008): 89–106.
- Special Issue: María Zambrano In Dialogue. Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies 16. 4
Sources
- Claire Buck (ed.), Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature (1992)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to María Zambrano. |
- Biographical chronology in Spanish.
- Extensive bibliography in Spanish.
- Philosophy and Poetry translation