Circe Maia
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Circe Maia, (born June 29, 1932, in
Montevideo Montevideo (, ; ) is the capital city, capital and List of cities in Uruguay, largest city of Uruguay. According to the 2023 census, the city proper has a population of 1,302,954 (about 37.2% of the country's total population) in an area of . M ...
), is a Uruguayan poet, essayist, translator, and teacher.


Biography

Circe Maia was born in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1932. Her parents were María Magdalena Rodríguez and the notary Julio Maia, both originally from the north of Uruguay. Her father published her first book of poetry (''Plumitas'', 1944) when she was just 12 years old. The sudden death of her mother when she was 19 left a somber mark on Maia's first book of mature poetry which was published when she was 25 (''En el tiempo'', 1958). She married Ariel Ferreira, a medical doctor, in 1957. In 1962 they moved permanently to Tacuarembó in the north of Uruguay with their first two children. She studied philosophy in the Instituto de Profesores Artigas and also at the Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias of the
Universidad de la República The University of the Republic (, sometimes ''UdelaR'') is a public research university in Montevideo, Uruguay. It is the country's oldest and largest university, as well as one of the largest public universities in South America in terms of en ...
, both in Montevideo. She began teaching philosophy at a Tacuarembó high school and at the Instituto de Formación Docente de Tacuarembó, the local teachers' college. She was a founding member of a students' union (Centro de Estudiantes del Instituto de Profesores Artigas) and an active member of the
Socialist Party of Uruguay The Socialist Party of Uruguay () is a centre-left political party in Uruguay. Founded in 1910, it is part of the Broad Front political coalition and the Progressive Alliance. History The party was founded in 1910. Its main leader and spokes ...
. The years of the civil-military dictatorship of Uruguay were difficult for Circe Maia and her family. At 3 a.m. one morning in 1972, police raided their home to arrest both Ariel and Circe. However Circe was allowed to remain because she was caring for their four-day-old daughter. Her husband was imprisoned for two years for being associated with the Tupamaros National Liberation Movement. In 1973 the government dismissed her from her teaching position at the high school. However, she began to teach English and French language classes privately. In 1982 her 18-year-old son was killed in an automobile accident. This tragedy combined with the pressures of the dictatorship caused her to suspend poetry writing. With the return of democracy in 1985, her position at the high school was restored, and in 1987 she published two books, ''Destrucciones'', a small book of bitter prose, and ''Un viaje a Salto'', a narrative about an incident during her husband's imprisonment. Her return to poetry was marked by the publication of ''Superficies'' (1990), which was followed by other poetry books and her translations from English, Greek, and other languages. For the reading public, her most important publication was the recompilation of poetry from her previous nine books appearing as ''Circe Maia: obra poética'' (2007 and 2010), amounting to over 400 pages. Circe Main taught philosophy in high school until her retirement in 2001, but she continued to teach English in a private institute and direct local theater productions, as well as continuing her work as a poet, essayist, and translator.


Poetry

In her first book as an adult, ''En el tiempo'' (1958) Circe Maia wrote that she favored a poetic language that was "direct, sober, and open, that was not different in tone from conversation, but was a conversation with greater quality, greater intensity.... The mission of this language is to uncover, not to hide; to uncover the value and meaning of existence, not to usher us into a separate world requiring an exclusive and closed poetic language". Throughout her poetic career Maia has been faithful to this conviction. People, objects, personal tragedies, the art of painting, and the passage of time are some themes she has "uncovered", and by doing so has revealed the human condition. She uses her personal experience to feel the pulse of humanity and to discuss it conversationally, as with a close friend. For more than fifty years she has avoided letting her poetry become self-contained, the sort of literature that ends up as monologue. As she has said, I see "in daily lived experience one of the most authentic sources of poetry". Her intensely intelligent poetry is an expression of sensation, especially the heard and the seen. Her poems have been set to music by
Daniel Viglietti Daniel Alberto Viglietti Indart (24 July 1939 – 30 October 2017) was an Uruguayan folk singer, guitarist, composer, and political activist. He was one of the main exponents of Uruguayan popular song and also of the ''Nueva Canción'' or "New ...
,
Jorge Lazaroff Jorge Ovidio Lazaroff Cesconi (28 February 1950 – 22 March 1989) was an Uruguayan composer, singer and guitarist. His father was a Bulgarian immigrant and his mother was born in Salto, Uruguay, Salto, Uruguay. Discography *''Albañil'' (1979 ...
, Numa Moraes, and Andrés Stagnaro, among others. That her poetry has been part of the spirit of the times can be seen in the Uruguayan
nueva canción (European , ; 'new song') is a left-wing social movement and musical genre in Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula, characterized by folk music, folk-inspired styles and socially committed lyrics. is widely recognized to have played a profou ...
group of the late 1970s ''Los que Iban Cantando'', whose name was inspired by a poem in her book ''En el tiempo'' (1958). Perhaps more significantly, her poem ''Por detrás de mi voz'' was set to music by
Daniel Viglietti Daniel Alberto Viglietti Indart (24 July 1939 – 30 October 2017) was an Uruguayan folk singer, guitarist, composer, and political activist. He was one of the main exponents of Uruguayan popular song and also of the ''Nueva Canción'' or "New ...
in 1978 as ''Otra voz canta''. This song, sometimes performed in combination with the poem ''Desaparecidos'' by
Mario Benedetti Mario Benedetti Farrugia (; 14 September 1920 – 17 May 2009), was a Uruguayan journalist, novelist, and poet and an integral member of the Generación del 45. Despite publishing more than 80 books and being published in twenty languages, he ...
, became a Latin American anthem against the military regimes that committed
forced disappearances An enforced disappearance (or forced disappearance) is the secret abduction or imprisonment of a person with the support or acquiescence of a State (polity), state followed by a refusal to acknowledge the person's fate or whereabouts with the i ...
, especially those participating in
Operation Condor Operation Condor (; ) was a campaign of political repression by the right-wing dictatorships of the Southern Cone of South America, involving intelligence operations, coups, and assassinations of left-wing sympathizers in South America which fo ...
:


Regional background

Maia has lived for many years in the northern city of
Tacuarembó Tacuarembó ( Guaraní language, Guarani: ''Takuarembo'', literally: "Bamboo shoot") is the capital city of the Tacuarembó Department in north-central Uruguay. History On 24 October 1831, a presidential decree by Fructuoso Rivera ordered the cr ...
. Along with fellow writer Jesús Moraes, she is one of the relatively few contemporary Uruguayan writers to be strongly identified with the north of the country.


'Poemas de Caraguatá'

Her series of poems 'Poemas de Caraguatá, I, II, III & IV', take their name from the Maia's reflections provoked by an indigenous toponym of
Tacuarembó Department Tacuarembó () is the largest department of Uruguay and it is part of its northern region. Its capital is Tacuarembó. It borders Rivera Department to its north and east, the departments of Salto, Paysandú and Río Negro to its west and has th ...
in the north of the country, which may variously refer to a range of hills Cuchilla de Caraguatá, a local town named after that range of hills, a local river, the Caraguatá River, or a local plant. In this series of poems are contained reflections to which local topography, flora and fauna have given rise.


Prizes

* 2007, Premio Nacional de Poesía de Uruguay. * 2009, Premio Anual de Literatura–Poesía, for the book ''Obra Completa.'' * 2009, Homenaje de la Academia Nacional de Letras. * 2010,
Premio Bartolomé Hidalgo The Premio Bartolomé Hidalgo () are the most important literary awards in Uruguay. Established in 1988, they are named after Bartolomé Hidalgo, one of the founders of Gaucho literature. Selected recipients Authors * Roy Berocay * Fernando ...
a la trayectoria. * 2012, Medalla Delmira Agustini. * 2015, Premio Bartolomé Hidalgo de poesía for the book ''Dualidades.'' * 2015, El Gran Premio a la Labor Intelectual, MEC. * 2023, Premio Internacional de Poesía Ciudad de Granada Federico García Lorca.


Bibliography


Poetry

;Collections *1944, ''Plumitas''. *1958, ''En el tiempo''. *1958, ''Presencia diaria''. *1970, ''El Puente''. *1972, ''Maia, Bacelo, Benavides; poesía''. *1978, ''Cambios, permanencias''. *1981, ''Dos voces'' *1986, ''Destrucciones'', (prose poems). *1987, ''Un viaje a Salto'', (prose). *1990, ''Superficies''. *1996, ''Círculo de luz, círculo de sombra'', (translation of her poetry into Swedish). *1998, ''De lo visible''. *1999, ''Medida por medida'', (translation of Shakespeare's ''Measure for Measure''). *2001, ''Breve sol''. *2001, ''Yesterday a Eucalyptus'', (translation of her poetry into English). *2004, ''A Trip to Salto'', (English translation of her 1987 book). *2010, ''Obra poética'', (collected poetry). *2011, ''La casa de polvo sumeria: sobre lecturas y traducciones''. *2013, ''La pesadora de perlas''. *2013, ''Poemas: Robin Fulton'', (her translation of the Scottish poet). *2014, ''Dualidades'' *2015, ''El Puente Invisible/The Invisible Bridge/Selected Poems of Circe Maia'' (bilingual edition) *2018, ''Transparencias'' *2018, ''Múltiples paseos a un lugar desconocido'' *2020, ''Voces del agua'' ;List of poems


See also

* Cuchilla de Caraguatá#Featured in literature


References


External links


Circe Maia poem in translation at ''Poetry Daily''.

Five poems in translation at ''Blackbird''.

Three poems in translation at ''The American Literary Review''

Two poems in translation at ''Boston Review''.

Three poems in translation at ''Escape into Life''.

Two poems in translation published in ''Philosophy Now''.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Maia, Circe Members of the Uruguayan Academy of Language 1932 births Living people 20th-century Uruguayan poets 20th-century Uruguayan essayists 20th-century translators 20th-century Uruguayan women writers 21st-century Uruguayan poets 21st-century essayists 21st-century translators 21st-century Uruguayan women writers Greek–Spanish translators Italian–Spanish translators People from Tacuarembó The New Yorker people University of the Republic (Uruguay) alumni Uruguayan translators Uruguayan women essayists Uruguayan women poets Writers from Montevideo Recipients of the Delmira Agustini Medal