Ana Hatherly

Ana Hatherly (8 May 1929 – 5 August 2015) was a Portuguese academic, poet, visual artist, and writer. She was considered one of the pioneers of experimental poetry and literature movement in Portugal.[1][2]

Hatherly was born in Porto, Portugal, in 1929.[1] She held a degree in Germanic philology from the University of Lisbon and a doctorate in Hispanic studies from the University of California, Berkeley, as well as training in both film and music.[1] Hatherly was a professor of human and social sciences at Universidade Nova de Lisboa, where she founded the university's Institute of Portuguese Studies.[1] She utilized film, visual arts, and poetry in her work, which included the avant-garde.[1]

Ana Hatherly died in a hospital in Lisbon, on 5 August 2015, at the age of 86. Her funeral was held at the Estrela Basilica in Lisbon, with burial in the cemitério dos Olivais.[1]

Poetry

  • Um Ritmo Perdido (1958)
  • As Aparências (1959)
  • A Dama e o Cavaleiro (1960)
  • Sigma (1965)
  • Estruturas Poéticas - Operação 2 (1967)
  • Eros Frenético (1968)
  • 39 Tisanas (1969)
  • Anagramático (1970)
  • 63 Tisanas: (40-102) (1973)
  • Poesia: 1958-1978 (1980)
  • Ana Viva e Plurilida (1982)
  • O Cisne Intacto (1983)
  • A Cidade das Palavras (1988)
  • Volúpsia (1994)
  • 351 Tisanas (1997)
  • Rilkeana (1999)
  • Um Calculador de Improbabilidades (2001)
  • O Pavão Negro (2003)
  • Itinerários (2003)
  • Fibrilações (2005)
  • A Idade da Escrita e outros poemas (2005)
  • 463 Tisanas (2006)
  • A Neo-Penélope (2007)

References

  1. "Ana Hatherly (1929-2015)". Correio da Manhã. 2015-08-05. Retrieved 2015-09-02.
  2. Jackson, K. David. "Portuguese literature". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2015-09-02.


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