- Source: Carmen de Burgos
- Lazarillo de Tormes
- Katedral Formosa
- Boystown (film)
- Roa de Duero
- Agata
- Ozamiz
- Daftar katedral di Spanyol
- Flower of Evil (seri televisi Filipina)
- El Chal
- Daftar pelukis Spanyol
- Carmen de Burgos
- Iglesia del Carmen, Burgos
- Feminists and the Spanish Civil War
- Women on the Republican side of the Spanish Civil War
- Lesbians in the Spanish Second Republic
- Convento de Santa Clara (Burgos)
- Clara Campoamor
- Ramón Gómez de la Serna
- Carmen Polo
- Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos
Carmen de Burgos y Seguí (pseudonyms, Colombine, Gabriel Luna, Perico el de los Palotes, Raquel, Honorine and Marianela; Almería, December 10, 1867 – Madrid, October 9, 1932) was a Spanish journalist, writer, translator and women's rights activist. Johnson describes her as a "modern" if not "modernist" writer.
Early years
She was born in 1867 in Almeria to a middle-class family, in which her father owned a gold mine. Her father José de Burgos Cañizares and her uncle Ferdinand were in charge of the vice-consulate of Portugal in Almeria. Her mother, Nicosia Segui Nieto, had come to the marriage with a substantial inheritance.
Career
She escaped her family when she met Arturo Asterz Bustos. He was fifteen years older than her; he was a poet, writer, and an alcoholic. Her new husband earned money as a typesetter on the family's newspaper, but she quickly discovered that this was to be her work. She and Arturo were unhappily married for 17 years, having four children - of whom only one survived. In 1898 her infant son died and she enrolled at the local college to obtain a teaching certificate. She quickly advanced, and within a year she was qualified to teach primary. By the end of 1898, she was qualified to teach secondary school and by 1900 she was qualified to teach teachers. Armed with her new achievements, she could anticipate employment for life. She and her remaining daughter left her abusive and unfaithful husband and they set up their own house in Guadalajara where her first book was written. During this time she had learnt how to write for a living, she had earned her independence and she had developed a contempt for the institution of marriage. Burgos regarded herself as a feminist but her gender meant that her writings were not included when evaluations were made of Spanish (male) modernism.
However Burgos was nominally creating a number of novels for the "weekly novel" market that was popular at the start of the twentieth century. Burgos's novels however dealt with legal and political themes. Her novels dealt with taboo subjects including male and female homosexuality. She highlighted the dual values applied that blamed women who were adulterers whereas men's involvement was forgiven. Women were given responsibility for illegitimate children and the law overlooked the abuse that some women found within their marriages. It has been noted that Burgos raised controversial subjects concerning gender, the law and rights but her writing did not offer a solution. She exposed to the readers the disparity between traditional values of female education and modern life. Burgos however exposed difficult issues as a dramatic event and in 1904 she had led a campaign to improve the availability of divorce.
Recognition
In 1906, Burgos became the first female professional journalist in Spain as editor of Madrid's Diario Universal. She also served as the first president of the International League of Iberian and Latin American Women (Liga Internacional de Mujeres Ibéricas e Hispanoamericanas). During Franco's dictatorship, Burgos was written out of the history books. Following the restoration of democracy she was again recognised and reinstated into the history of women's rights in Spain.
Selected works
= Essays and other works
== Novels
== Short stories
== Translations
== Translations into English
=Take Six: Six Spanish Women Writers, edited and translated by Kathryn Phillips-Miles and Simon Deefholts, Dedalus Books, 2022: Contains a selection of her stories in English translation.
— (2023). "The Russian Princess". In Reigh, Gabi (ed.). Virginia's Sisters. Translated by Slava Faybysh. ISBN 9781912430789. OCLC 1377211507.
References
= Bibliography
=Núñez Rey, Concepción (2014). "Un puente entre España y Portugal: Carmen de Burgos y su amistad con Ana de Castro Osório". ARBOR Ciencia, Pensamiento y Cultura (in Spanish). 190 (766). ISSN 0210-1963. Archived from the original (pdf) on June 7, 2014. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
Memorias de Colombine, la primera periodista (ISBN 84-923433-1-1) por Utrera, Federico. – Majadahonda: Hijos de Muley-Rubio, 1998. (in Spanish)
Carmen de Burgos Colombine (ISBN 84-670-1266-8) por Bravo Cela, Blanca. (in Spanish)
Carmen de Burgos, Colombine (1867–1932). Biografía y obra literaria. Tesis doctoral a cargo de Concepción Núñez Rey. Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 1992. (in Spanish)
Ramírez Gómez, Carmen (2000). Mujeres escritoras en la prensa andaluza del siglo XX (1900–1950). Literatura. Vol. 41. Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla. ISBN 9788447205608. (in Spanish)
Valdés, Asunción (2021). Revivir (in Spanish). ISBN 978-84-7784-828-8.
External links
Works by Carmen de Burgos at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)