Nationality Nicaraguan | Name Gioconda Belli Role Author | |
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Parents Humberto Belli, Gloria Pereira Books La mujer habitada, El pais Bajo mi piel, El Pergamino de la Sed, Sofia de los presagios, The Country Under My Similar People Ernesto Cardenal, Claribel Alegria, Alfonsina Storni, Blanca Varela, Alejandra Pizarnik | ||
Occupation Poet, author, novelist |
Conferencia con gioconda belli spanisch
Gioconda Belli (born December 9, 1948 in Managua, Nicaragua) is a Nicaraguan author, novelist and poet.
Contents
- Conferencia con gioconda belli spanisch
- Gioconda belli una vida sin miedo
- Early life
- Career
- Writing
- Awards
- References

Gioconda belli una vida sin miedo
Early life

Gioconda Belli, partly of Northern Italian descent, grew up in a wealthy family in Managua. She attended boarding school in Spain, graduated from the Royal School of Santa Isabel in Madrid, and studied advertising and journalism in Philadelphia. When she returned to Nicaragua, she married and had her first daughter at 19.
Career
Belli began her career as an advertising copywriter.
In 1970, Belli joined the Sandinista struggle against the Somoza dictatorship, and her work for the movement led to her being forced into exile in Mexico in 1975. Returning in 1979 just before the Sandinista victory, she became FSLN's international press liaison in 1982 and the director of State Communications in 1984. During that time she met Charles Castaldi, an American NPR journalist, whom she married in 1987. She has been living in both Managua and Los Angeles since 1990. She has since left the FSLN and is now a major critic of the current government.
Writing
In 1988, Belli's book La Mujer Habitada (The Inhabited Woman), a semi-autobiographical novel that raised gender issues for the first time in the Nicaraguan revolutionary narratives, brought her increased attention; this book has been published in several languages and was on the reading list at four universities in the United States. The novel follows two parallel stories: the indigenous resistance to the Spanish and modern insurgency in Central America with various points in common: women's emancipation, passion, and a commitment to liberation. In 2000, she published her autobiography, emphasizing her involvement in the revolutionary movement, El país bajo mi piel, published under the name The Country Under My Skin in the United States; it was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in 2003. Belli continues publishing and maintains that poetry is her most important work. Belli was the recipient of the Premio de Poesía Mariano Fiallos Gil in 1972 and of the Premio Casa de las Américas in 1978. In 2008 Belli received the Biblioteca Breve Award for her book El infinito en la palma de la mano (Infinity in the Palm of The Hand), an allegory about Adam and Eve in paradise.
Belli's books have been published in numerous languages.
Her 2010 book was submitted with the title "Cronicas de la Izquierda Erótica", but had to be changed to "El País de las Mujeres", since the previous title was too similar to that of a 1973 book by Ana María Rodas: Poemas de la Izquierda Erótica. The book tells the story of a world governed by women. In the novel she portrays a group of women that take power by means of a Political Party by the name of "Partido de la Izquierda Erotica". This is the same name as a movement formed by women during the 80s, to which Belli belonged, which had been named as a tribute to Rodas´ work.