Ivonne Coñuecar

Ivonne Coñuecar
Born1980
Coyhaique, Patagonia, Chile
OccupationPoet, novelist, journalist
LanguageSpanish

Ivonne Coñuecar (born September 26, 1980) is a Mapuche writer, poet and journalist from Coyhaique, Chile.

Her first novel, Coyhaiqueer, won the Santiago Municipal Literature Award in 2019.[1] She currently lives in Argentina.[2]

Early life and education

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Coñuecar was born in 1980. At 14 years old, she began to write for a literary supplement of Diario de Aysén, from 1994 to 1998.[3]

Coñuecar began to study law at the Austral University of Chile, but later changed her studies to communication studies and journalism in the same university.[2][4] She graduated there with a master's degree in Contemporary Latin American literature, thanks to a scholarship granted by the National Council of Culture and the Arts.[2] Her thesis was about the literature of the Aysén Region.[5]

Career

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In 2008, Coñuecar published her first collection of poems, Catabática, first part of a trilogy of poetry that includes Adiabática (2009) and Anabática (2014).[3][6]

In 2018, she released her novel Coyhaiqueer, a book about the queer community in the Coyhaique commune,[7] which received the Santiago Municipal Literature Award in 2019.[3]

Works

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Novels

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  • Coyhaiqueer (Ñire Negro Ediciones, 2018)

Poetry

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  • Trasandina (Ñire Negro Ediciones, 2017)
  • Patriagonia (LOM Ediciones, 2014)
  • Chagas (Editorial Fuga, 2010)
  • Adiabática (Ediciones Kultrún, 2009)
  • Catabática (Editorial Jabalí, 2008)

Participation in anthologies

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  • Provinciana n.º 2. Revista de Literatura y pensamiento (University of Valparaiso, 2019)
  • Con mi caracol y mi revólver. Muestra de poesía chilena reciente (Vallejo & Co, 2018)
  • ¡¡BASTA!! 100 mujeres contra la violencia de género (Editorial Asterion, 2012)
  • Küme Dungun/Küme Wirin. Antología Poetas Mujeres Mapuche (LOM Ediciones, 2011)
  • Voces para Lilith. Literatura contemporánea de temática lésbica en Sudamérica (ed. by Claudia Salazar Jiménez, Editorial Estruendomudo, 2011)
  • Lof sitiado. Homenaje poético al pueblo mapuche de Chile (edited by Jaime Huenún, 2011)
  • Escrituras de la memoria, reescritura de La Araucana (Editorial Cuarto Propio, 2010)
  • Revista Nomadías n°11 (Universidad de Chile, 2009)
  • Antología. Concurso de cuentos sobre VIH (SEREMI de Salud, 2004)
  • Antología del Primer Concurso de Cuentos Escuela de Medicina (Austral University of Chile, 2003)
  • Antología del Décimo Concurso Nacional de Cuentos Fernando Santiván (Corporación Cultural Municipal de Valdivia, 2003)
  • Antología poética de mujeres latinoamericanas Voces de luna (Editions Alondras, Canada, 2001)

Awards and nominations

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References

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  1. ^ a b "El Jurado da a conocer a los ganadores de los Premios Literarios 2019" [The Jury announces the winners of the 2019 Literary Awards]. Subdirección de Cultura de la Municipalidad de Santiago (in Spanish). 27 December 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "Ivonne Coñuecar" (in Spanish). Editorial Ñire Negro. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  3. ^ a b c "Universidades estatales de la patagonia celebran el día internacional del libro a través de sus poetas" [State universities of Patagonia celebrate International Book Day through their poets]. Universidad de Aysén (in Spanish). 22 April 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  4. ^ Zerán, Faride (26 January 2015). "La Patriagonia de Ivonne Coñuecar" [The Patagonia of La Patriagonia de Ivonne Coñuecar]. El Mostrador (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  5. ^ ""Trasandina" un símil de la extranjeria y la infancia de Ivonne Coñuecar". Radio Ventisqueros (in Spanish). 23 October 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  6. ^ Moraga García, Fernanda (2012). "Catabática: cartografías de subjetividades fronterizas" [Catabática: border subjectivities cartography]. Revista Literatura y Lingüística (in Spanish). Vol. 26. pp. 47–59. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  7. ^ "Libro revela el mundo queer de Coyhaique" [Book reveals the queer side of Cohyaique]. El Desconcierto (in Spanish). 6 April 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2022.