Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Tomás Segovia

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Name
  
Tomas Segovia

Role
  
Author

Books
  
Fiel imagen


Tomas Segovia Segovia Un breve recorrido por un gran poeta T E el


Died
  
November 7, 2011, Mexico City, Mexico

Education
  
National Autonomous University of Mexico

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, Latin America & Caribbean

Tomás Segovia ([toˈmas seˈɣoβja]; 21 May 1927 – 7 November 2011) was a Mexican author, translator and poet of Spanish origin. He was born in Valencia, Spain, and studied in France and Morocco. He went into exile to Mexico, where he taught at the Colegio de México and other universities. Segovia founded the publication Presencia (1946), was director of La Revista Mexicana de Literatura (1958–1963), formed part of the magazine Plural, and collaborated in Vuelta.

Contents

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In honour of the poet, in August 2012, Conaculta (the Mexican Council for National Culture and Arts) announced the $100,000 Tomás Segovia Literary Translation Prize, to be awarded in alternating years for the best translation into Spanish or from Spanish.

Tomás Segovia Segovia Un breve recorrido por un gran poeta T E el diario de la

Works

Tomás Segovia Poesa ertica de Toms Segovia Fragments de vida

His work as a poet is not separate from his literary criticism and works of translation. Notable books of poetry include La luz provisional (1950), El sol y su eco (1960), Anagnórisis (1967), Figura y secuencias (1979) and Cantata a solas (1985). Prose works include: Contracorrientes (1973), Poética y profética (1986) and Alegatorio.

At the time of his death he resided in Madrid, Spain.

Awards

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Segovia won the Xavier Villaurrutia Prize in 1972, the Juan Rulfo Prize in 2005, and the Premio García Lorca in 2008.

Films

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  • La primera segunda matriz (1972). Mexican filmmaker Alfredo Gurrola made this critically acclaimed short film based in the Segovia's poem of the same name. The film includes the narration by Juan José Gurrola, images of the Avándaro festival and music by avant-garde composers Ligeti, Stockhausen, Luigi Nono among others.

  • Tomás Segovia PreTextos Toms Segovia

    References

    Tomás Segovia Wikipedia