Project Description
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz PrizeSylvia Iparraguirre
Argentina
Sylvia Iparraguirre, born in 1947, has gained considerable fame in Argentina as novelist, essayist and co-director of several magazine projects like El Escarabajo de Oro and El Ornitorrinco, the latter against censorship and the military dictatorship. Currently, she teaches postgraduate courses at the University of Buenos Aires. She has published fiction and criticism in the daily newspapers Clarín and Página/12. In 1999, her novel LA TIERRA DEL FUEGO was named as Book of the Year (Book Fair of Buenos Aires) and awarded the prestigious Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize. THE ORPHANING was a finalist for the prestigious Rómulo Gallegos Prize 2011. Iparraguirre was also awarded the Esteban Echeverría National Prize in 2012 in recognition of her body of work and, for MEETING WITH MUNCH, the Platinum Konex Award in 2014.
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Before It Disappears
„I am eighteen years old and I look out at the Rio de la Plata. On Sunday afternoons, the nuns take us out for a walk. It‘s me, but from this side of time I see myself as if I were someone else.“ Lucía is a teenager who arrives in Buenos Aires to attend university. Her place to live: a nuns‘boarding school; her place to study: one of the most politicised faculties of the time. The tumultuous political reality of the late 60s and early 70s is the setting for her initiation into adult life and establishes a dislocated counterpoint, at times hilarious, with her daily life with the headmistress and her close companions. Before It Disappears (»Antes que desaparezca«) is built on a subtly complex yet diaphanous plot, which reaffirms Sylvia Iparraguirre‘s talent as a novelist and gives us this unforgettable novel with an autobiographical touch.
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Russian Literature Classes
Russian authors burst into the 19th century with distinctive force and uniqueness within European literature, projecting their fundamental influence into the 20th century. Divided between the omnipotent power of the tsar – isolated in his fear of revolt – and the peasant people – subject to rural slavery – society had a single interpreter and a single spokesman: its writers. And only one representation: the one they gave it in their texts. With folkloric roots in Asia and an eye to the French Enlightenment, Russia produced all its modern literature in one century. Imagined and developed under fierce Tsarist censorship, its authors produced a narrative and poetry marked by an intense understanding of the human. After an introduction that situates us in the milestones of Russian history, Sylvia Iparraguirre analyses in Russian Literature Classes (“Clases de literatura rusa”) works by Pushkin, Gogol, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy and Chekhov, who were of critical importance for universal culture and for all subsequent writers, who at some point have acknowledged that they are their literary debtors.
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The Invisible Life
A reader discovers, during childhood, that she can live another life in books. More intense, passionate, unknown to others. She reads hypnotically Cortázar, Tolstoy, Bakhtin, Borges. Before and after, two large libraries sustain her: that of her grandmother in Los Toldos and the one she shared with Abelardo Castillo, whose portrait becomes a loving memory. From a reading diary, an album of poetry and her personal memory, the critical thinking of Sylvia Iparraguirre is revealed in The Invisible Life (“La vida invisible”) through an avid and genuine narrative.
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The Orphaning
In a small town in the Argentine pampas, quiet Sonia grows up in an orphanage. Only when the anarchist trade unionist Bautista, who spent many years in prison as an innocent man, woos the young woman does she awake from her long years of paralysis and turn to face life. Told in retrospective, the novel’s intensive characters and atmospheric descriptions of the broad landscapes of the Argentine pampas truly draw the reader in. After El muchacho de los senos de goma, The Orphaning (“La orfandad”) is the second part of a trilogy in progress portraying three generations of an Argentinean family.
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The Boy with the Rubber Breasts
The Boy with the Rubber Breasts (“El muchacho de los senos de goma”) is set in present-day Buenos Aires. Cristobal, or Cris, is seventeen years old and rather annoyed by his family home. His mother always takes his stepfather’s side, and he is always expected to help out in the workshop. He would rather be listening to music and indulging his passionate interest in philosophy. His teacher is Professor Mentasti, who invites him to attend advanced courses due to his incisive and independent reasoning. One day he packs his bags and leaves home. In a distant corner of Buenos Aires he finds refuge by chance at the home of Señora Vidot, a strange woman who seems to live in her own world. Cris does not know that her husband was lost at sea. She gives him a room without posing too many questions or asking anything in return. They both feel drawn to one another, and one night sexual tension becomes lovemaking. It is only later that Cris discovers that he has confused his new feelings with love, has new experiences and becomes more mature. He gives up his job as a seller of merchandise on the street – the rubber breasts, meant for relaxing office workers, were a real flop! – and, after a final talk to his Profesor who himself is passing through a crisis, decides to leave Buenos Aires.
With a sure hand and shimmering storytelling Sylvia Iparraguirre leads her readers through a compartmentalised city, in which flights of intellectual brilliance and bitter poverty, hope and hopelessness stand side by side, and where people survive crises and occasionally grow from them. The final scene, a description of the waking city and a young man making his escape, reads like the crescendo to a piece of music that gets deep under your skin.
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La Tierra del Fuego
After two volumes of short stories La Tierra del Fuego, her second novel, was shortlisted for the 1998 Premio Alfaguara. At the Buenos Aires Book Fair 1999 the work was awarded the prestigious Literary CriticsPrize as Best Book of the Year (1998), and the Sigfrido Radaelli Prize by the Club de los 13 for the best novel in 1998 and in Mexico the Sor Juana Prize.
In 1830 the “Beagle” sets sail from England for Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, captained by the young Robert FitzRoy. On arrival, the crew encounter members of the Yámana people. When the ship returns to London a Yámana girl, Fuegia, and three young men, one of them called Jemmy Button are on board. In London the Indios are introduced to British society and the royal family and later initiated into “civilised life” at a school in the country. Having spent two years in England, the Yámanas are returned to Tierra del Fuego by Captain FitzRoy. On board the ship this time was a young natural scientist, Charles Darwin, fully convinced of his science. Captain FitzRoy on the other hand sees it as his task to teach the Indios his language and culture and thus help them to achieve a better, more “civilised” life. He believes that once back in Tierra del Fuego the Yámanas will maintain their British way of life and pass it on to others. One year later, when Captain FitzRoy sails by Tierra del Fuego, he realises to his horror that Jemmy and the others have reverted to their old way of life and are living just like those around them; they want nothing more to do with England.
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Tierra del Fuego. A Biography of the End of the World
Tierra del Fuego. A Biography of the End of the World (“Tierra del Fuego. Una biografía del fin del mundo”) was first published as a coffee-table book and will soon be available in a more handy edition. In her introduction, Iparraguirre says: After its extensive journey from the north, the Andes, South America’s imposing vertebral column, stretches down to the continent’s southern most tip, crosses Tierra del Fuego’s Isla Grande, slips under the Le Maire Strait and then emerges finally, like a blackened, burned dragon’s tail in the Isla de Los Estados. This mountain range, right at the end of the world, was, according to myth, a source of shamanic power for the people of Tierra del Fuego. Marked by American largesse, nature rules dramatically in this corner of the world, towering over mankind. Men and women who behold these landscapes are swept giddily back to the beginning of time, overwhelmed by how small they feel in their presence, as they surrender to the natural boundaries that surround them.
RIGHTS
NOVELS
Before She Disappears (“Antes que desaparezca”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara (PRH) 2021, 383 p.
Already in its 3rd edition
English sample translation available
Meeting with Munch (“Encuentro con Munch”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara 2013, 200 p.
Platinum Konex Award 2014
The Orphaning (“La orfandad”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara 2010, 264 p.
Shortlisted for the Rómulo Gallegos Prize 2011
Italy: L’Asino d’Oro 2014
The Boy with the Rubber Breasts (“El muchacho de los senos de goma”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara 2007, 345 p.
Germany: Stockmann 2010 · Italy: L’Asino d’Oro · The Netherlands: de Geus 2012
La tierra del fuego
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara, 1998, 286 p., 2022 (8th edition)
pb punto de lectura 2006, DeBolsillo 2018
Selected among 10 of the best novels set in Latin America by The Guardian 2020
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize 1999
Literary Critics Prize as Best Book of the Year 1999
Sigfrido Radaelli Prize by the Club of the XIII for the Best Novel 1998
Brazil: Record 2001 · Croacia: Petrine knjige · France: Métailié 2001 · Germany: Alexander Fest 1999, Büchergilde Gutenberg 2000, Fischer, pb 2001 · Greece: Nikolopoulos · Israel: Carmel 2011 · Italy: Einaudi 2001 · Kuwait: Dar Alkhan 2020 · The Netherlands: de Geus 2001 · Portugal: ASA 2001 · USA: Curbstone Press 2000
The Park (“El parque”)
Buenos Aires: Emecé 1996; Alfaguara 2004, 259 p.
Italy: Crocetti 2004
ESSAYS
Russian Literature Classes (“Clases de literatura rusa”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara (PRH) 2023, 384 p., 2024 (4th edition)
The Invisible Life (“La vida invisible”)
Buenos Aires: Ampersand 2018 138 p.
SHORT PROSE
Del día y de la noche
Buenos Aires: Galerna 2015, 174 p.
STORIES
Selected Short Stories (“Cuentos reunidos”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara (PRH)
Short Narrative (“Narrativa breve”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara 2005, 393 p.
ALIJA Prize 2003, the Argentinian section of the IBBY
“Encontrando a Celina” (in: Narrativa breve)
Louisiana: The Southern Review, forthcoming Summer 2022
The Land of the Winds (“El país del viento”)
Buenos Aires: Alfaguara 2003, 168 p.; 2015; 2023
Brasil: Kumon · Greece: Nikolopoulos
Probable Showers at Night (“Probables lluvias por la noche”)
Buenos Aires: Emecé 1993; Alfaguara 2009, 150 p.
In the Winter of the Cities (“En el invierno de las ciudades”)
Buenos Aires: Galerna 1988, Alfaguara, 158 p.
First Municipal Prize for Literature 1988
PHOTO-TEXT-BOOK
Tierra del Fuego. A Biography of the End of the World
(“Tierra del Fuego. Una biografía del fin del mundo”)
Together with the photographer Florian von der Fecht
Buenos Aires: Total Austral 2000, 112 p., first published by El Ateneo; Del Nuevo Extremo 2009, 223 p.
(Bilingual English-Spanish edition)
For more information, please take a look at the following page:
> florian.com.ar
Eikon Prize
Greece: Nikolopoulos