Draft:Patricio Ferrari

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Patricio Ferrari
Ferrari in 2022
Ferrari in 2022
Born (1975-11-25) November 25, 1975 (age 48)
Merlo, Buenos Aires, Argentina
OccupationPolyglot Poet, Literary Translator, Editor, Literary Scholar, Adjunct Professor: Sarah Lawrence College & Rutgers University-Newark
Education
GenrePoetry, Literary Translation

Patricio Ferrari (born November 25, 1975) is an Argentinian poet, translator, editor, and literary scholar. He speaks seven languages (Spanish, English, French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Hindi) and publishes in five. As editor and literary translator, he has published 20 books in publishing houses including New Directions (U.S.), Tinta-da-China (Portugal), Pre-Textos (Spain), Buenos Aires Poetry (Argentina), and Éditions de la Différence (France).[1]

Between Cultures & Languages[edit]

Early Life in Argentina

Born in Merlo, Argentina to immigrants from Piedmont and Calabria, Patricio Ferrari grew up in the province of Buenos Aires. From an early age, he was exposed to English at the San Patricio Language Institute, a language school established by his mother, Graciela S. Guglielmone, in 1971.[2]

In his childhood, he showed a deep affinity for soccer. In 1989, his devotion and defensive skills led him to join the under-14 squad for Argentino de Merlo. His journey with the club culminated in 1992 when he advanced to play for their reserve team.[3]

United States & France

At the age of 16, drawing from his already multilingual background, Patricio Ferrari ventured beyond Argentina’s borders to the United States to immerse himself in both academic and athletic pursuits. In 1992, facilitated by Rotary International, he attended Strath Haven High School in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.[4] In the fall of 1994, Ferrari received a full soccer scholarship at Campbellsville College in Kentucky. His journey took an unexpected turn the following year after he transferred to Slippery Rock University to play for their Division II team.[5] It was during this time that a meniscus injury, coupled with a growing interest in the French language and poetry, marked a shift for Ferrari and a focus on more academic and literary endeavors.

In 1997, at the age of 21, through Slippery Rock’s study abroad program, he attended the Collège International de Cannes.[6] There, he received an academic scholarship, allowing him to dive into the works of Baudelaire, Verlaine, and Rimbaud. This period resulted in Ferrari’s first foray into exophony in French.

After earning summa cum laude honors in 1999 with a dual major in French and Philosophy, Ferrari relocated to Athens, Georgia. There, he dedicated a year to working and auditing Hindi classes at the University of Georgia.[7]

India

In January 2001, he embarked on a journey to India, living with local families in Allahabad during the Kumbh Mela and exclusively communicating in Hindi. His exploration extended across the Hindi Belt for several months, culminating in a trip to the Andaman Islands. In Little Andaman, he contracted dengue fever and malaria concurrently. This near-death experience resulted in a strenuous month-long hospitalization in Calcutta, during which he battled a severe health crisis.

Following the harrowing experience, he sought solace and healing in Jantanwala Village, Uttarakhand, through Vipassana meditation. Eventually, Ferrari made Mussoorie his home, enrolling at the Landour Language School situated in the tranquil environs of Landour. Surrounded by the breathtaking beauty of the Himalayas and residing with a local family, he composed his Indian diaries, blending English and Hindi.[8]

France

In 2002, Ferrari moved to Paris, setting up residence on Rue de la Folie Méricourt in the vibrant République, Oberkampf, and Canal Saint-Martin areas of the 11th arrondissement. It was in this culturally rich setting that he embarked on his Master of Arts in Comparative Literature at the Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris III.[9] His dissertation, which he completed in French under the advisement of Daniel-Henri Pageaux, was a comparative study of the poetry of Jorge Luis Borges and Fernando Pessoa.[10]

Portugal

In 2006 Ferrari moved to Lisbon where he immersed himself deeply in the Portuguese language and culture. His work primarily involved the transcription of hundreds of previously unpublished writings by Fernando Pessoa, including marginalia.[11] [12] [13] During this period he edited several of Pessoa's posthumous works in the three languages in which he wrote (Portuguese, English, French).[14]

A particularly significant project during this time was the bilingual A Biblioteca Particular de Fernando Pessoa [Fernando Pessoa’s Private Library], co-authored with Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello.[15] This book emerged from their collaborative digitization efforts at the Casa Fernando Pessoa, a project that has been available online with open access since 2010.[16]

Ferrari’s scholarly endeavor culminated in 2012 when he was awarded a Ph.D. in Linguistics from the Universidade de Lisboa. His dissertation, “Meter and Rhythm in the Poetry of Fernando Pessoa,” shed light on the pivotal role that poetic meter and rhythm played in shaping Pessoa’s heteronyms as well as his own trilingual poetry.[17]

England & Sweden

After earning his Ph.D., Ferrari began his postdoctoral work with a focus on Fernando Pessoa’s unpublished English writings. In 2013, after months in London conducting research at the British Library and the Warburg Institute,[18] he co-organized the “Writers and their Libraries” symposium[19] alongside Wim Van Mierlo and Jerónimo Pizarro at the School of Advanced Study, University of London. Following the London sojourn, Ferrari ventured to Stockholm to work with Stefan Helgesson at Stockholm's Universitet[20]. There, he deepened his research on Pessoa’s formative years in Durban, South Africa, and the influence of such English poets as Thomas Chatterton and Thomas Wyatt[21] on some of Pessoa’s early fictitious authors. This period resulted in Fernando Pessoa as an English Reader and Writer (2015), co-edited with Jerónimo Pizarro, featuring a wide range of essays by international scholars.[22]

United States

In 2014, Ferrari returned to the U.S. to collaborate with George Monteiro at Brown University, where he concluded his postdoctoral research, organizing the inaugural international symposium focused exclusively on Fernando Pessoa’s English writings.[23] The symposium's proceedings were subsequently compiled in Inside the Mask: The English Poetry of Fernando Pessoa (2018).[24]

Since 2008 Ferrari has contributed to the field of literary criticism, publishing numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals including Luso-Brazilian Review,[25] Pessoa Plural,[26] Portuguese Studies,[27] Proverbium,[28] Rhythmica,[29] The Translator,[30] and Variaciones Borges,[31] among others, highlighting his scholarship and dedication to literary studies.

Professional Life[edit]

After moving to New York City in 2017, Ferrari began a new phase, accepting positions as an adjunct professor at Rutgers University-Newark[32] and Sarah Lawrence College[33]. His commitment to poetry, literary translation, language and cultural preservation led him to engage with the Endangered Language Alliance (ELA), a non-profit organization devoted to the documentation of indigenous, minority, and endangered languages.[34]

Since 2018 he has also served as Managing Director of San Patricio Language Institute, a language school established by his mother, Graciela S. Guglielmone, in 1971, in Merlo, Buenos Aires.[35]

Exophonic Writing and Literary Translation

While studying under the mentorship of U.S. poets C.D. Wright, Forrest Gander, and Cole Swensen, Ferrari delved into exophonic writing, self-translation, and transcreation. His period at this institution culminated in 2017 with an MFA in Poetry. His thesis, “Elsehere,”[36] a collection of multilingual poems, challenges the conventions of language while exploring the fluidity of borders and selves. Ferrari's exophonic works, including selections from “Mud Songs” (vol. I of the “Elsehere” trilogy), have been showcased in Fence,[37] Asymptote,[38] Buenos Aires Poetry[39] and Words Without Borders.[40]

In his role as a literary translator and editor, Ferrari has contributed to the publication of 20 books. [41] Noteworthy among these are The Galloping Hour: French Poems by Alejandra Pizarnik (co-translated with Forrest Gander; New Directions, 2018),[42], The Complete Works of Álvaro de Campos by Fernando Pessoa (co-translated with Margaret Jull Costa; New Directions, 2023),[43] and Habla terreña by Frank Stanford (co-translated with Graciela S. Guglielmone; Pre-Textos, 2023).[44] Other translations include writings by Laynie Browne and Martin Corless-Smith (from the English),[45] [46] António Osório (from the Portuguese),[47] and Vidrohi (from the Hindi)[48].

Honors & Awards

Ferrari has been recognized with an Honorable Mention in Literary Translation (Lois Roth Award)[49] for The Complete Works of Alberto Caeiro [50] by Fernando Pessoa and has received the Lisbon Township Merit Award[51] in acknowledgment of his significant contributions to the study of Pessoa, one of Europe’s most esteemed modernist poets.[52]

Sidelights[edit]

In 2024 Ferrari received his U.S. citizenship.

He resides in New York City where he founded and hosts the World Poetry in Translation reading series, an innovative platform that highlights foreign poets and translators from a spectrum of languages, both widely spoken and less recognized. The series celebrates the intricate art of translation to enhance the understanding and appreciation of global linguistic diversity, while creating a vital space for dialogue and appreciation of the world’s rich tapestry of languages.[53] He participates widely in poetry readings[54] and conversations about the craft of literary translation.[55] [56]

Since 2013 he has been an advisory board member of Portuguese Literary & Cultural Studies (UMass, Dartmouth) and since its inception in 2012, of Pessoa Plural (Brown University),[57] an international peer-reviewed scholarly journal dedicated to studies of Fernando Pessoa. He was the review editor of the latter between 2014 and 2021. Since 2014 he has been foreign correspondent of the Institut des textes & manuscrits modernes (Paris).[58]

Ferrari divides his time between New York City, Buenos Aires, and Dallas, where he bridges a life between cultures and between languages. He shares his life with his partner, Jennifer Keller.

Select Publications[edit]

As Literary Editor & Translator[edit]

  • Pessoa, Fernando.The Complete Works of Alberto Caeiro. Edited and introduced by Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari. Translated from Portuguese by Margaret Jull Costa and Patricio Ferrari. New York: New Directions, 2020.
  • Pizarnik, Alejandra. The Galloping Hour: French Poems of Alejandra Pizarnik. Edited and introduced by Patricio Ferrari. Translation from French by Patricio Ferrari and Forrest Gander. Bilingual edition. New York: New Directions, 2018.
  • Pizarnik, Alejandra. Poemas franceses. Edition, postface and translation from French by Patricio Ferrari. Bilingual edition. Collection Plaquettes. Santiago de Chile: Cuadro de Tiza Ediciones, 2018.

As Literary Translator[edit]

  • Browne, Laynie. Amuletos. Poemas nuevos y escogidos. Preface by Ron Silliman. Translated from English by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela S. Guglielmone. Bilingual edition. Buenos Aires: Zindo & Gafuri ediciones, 2018.
  • Pessoa, Fernando. The Complete Works of Álvaro de Campos. Edited and introduced by Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello. Translated from Portuguese with a biographical note by Margaret Jull Costa and Patricio Ferrari. New York: New Directions, 2023.
  • Corless-Smith, Martin. Verde amargo. Translated from English by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela S. Guglielmone. With a preface by Cole Swensen and an afterword by Patricio Ferrari. Bilingual edition. Buenos Aires: Buenos Aires Poetry, 2022.
  • Stanford, Frank. Habla terreña. Bilingual edition. Translated from English with notes by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela S. Guglielmone. Preface by James McWilliams. Valencia: Pre-Textos, 2023.

As Literary Editor[edit]

  • Pessoa, FernandoObra Completa de Alberto Caeiro. Edited and introduced by Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari. Lisbon: Tinta-da-china, 2016. [Publ. in English by New Directions, 2020]
  • Pessoa, Fernando. Teatro Estático. Edited by Filipa de Freitas and Patricio Ferrari in collaboration with Claudia J. Fischer. Preface and afterword by the editors. Lisbon: Tinta-da-china, 2017. [Publ. in Spanish by Bid&Co, 2019; publ. in Italian by Quodlibet, 2022].
  • Pessoa, Fernando. No Matter What We Dream: Selected English Poems. Edited, selected, and introduced by Patricio Ferrari and Jerónimo Pizarro. 2nd edition. Lisbon: Tell-a-story, 2015. [First ed. 2014].
  • Pessoa, Fernando. Eu Sou Uma Antologia: 136 autores fictícios. Edited and introduced by Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari. 2nd edition. Lisbon: Tinta-da-china, 2022. [First ed. 2013; Publ. in Spanish by Pre-textos, 2018].
  • Pessoa, Fernando. Poèmes français. Edited by Patricio Ferrari in collaboration with Patrick Quillier. Introduced by Patricio Ferrari. Preface by Patrick Quillier. Paris: Éditions de la Différence, 2014.
  • Pessoa, Fernando. Argumentos para Filmes. Edited and introduced by Patricio Ferrari and Claudia J. Fischer. Lisbon: Ática, 2011. [Publ. in Spanish by Ed. La Umbría y la Solana, 2017].
  • Pessoa, Fernando. Provérbios Portugueses. Compiled and translated into English by Fernando Pessoa. Edited and introduced by Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari. Lisbon: Ática, 2010. [Publ. in Spanish by Ed. Tragaluz, 2019].
  • Pizarnik, Alejandra. Antologia poética. Selection, preface, and notes by Ana Becciú and Patricio Ferrari. Translation from Spanish by Fernando Pinto do Amaral. Lisbon: Tinta-da-china, 2020.
  • Quental, Antero. Os Sonetos Completos de Antero de Quental. With Partial English Translation by Fernando Pessoa. Preface to Antero de Quental’s Sonnets by J. P. Oliveira Martins. Edited with an introductory note and postface by Patricio Ferrari. Lisbon: Ática, 2010.

As Author (Art Coffee-Table Books)[edit]

  • Os Objectos de Fernando Pessoa. Casa Fernando Pessoa Collection. Bilingual edition. Lisbon: D. Quixote, 2013. (With Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello).
  • A Biblioteca Particular de Fernando Pessoa. Casa Fernando Pessoa Collection. Bilingual edition. Lisbon: D. Quixote, 2010. (With Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonio Cardiello).

As Editor (Academic Journals)[edit]

  • Ferrari, Patricio, guest ed. Inside the Mask: The English Poetry of Fernando Pessoa. Providence [RI]: Gávea-Brown, 2018. Print. (Special Issue of Pessoa Plural, nº 10, Brown University, eds. Jerónimo Pizarro, Onésimo Almeida, Paulo de Medeiros, Fall 2016).
  • Ferrari, Patricio and Jerónimo Pizarro, guest eds. Fernando Pessoa as English Reader and Writer. Portuguese Literary & Cultural Studies, nº 28, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, Tagus Press (Spring 2015). Print.

Poetry in Literary Journals and Magazines (Selection)[edit]

As Author

  • “Mare,” “Wharfrom.” Asymptote, Co-existance Issue, Winter 2024, Yew Leong, Editor-in-Chief. Taipei, Taiwan. Digital.
  • “Mudonna,” “Amor Mio, a Mooring,” “Portsmouth (S 34° 36’ 47’’ | W 58° 22’ 38’’).” FENCE, n.40,  Vol. 22 # 1 (Winter  2023): 7-13. Print. Emily Wallis Hughes and Jason Zuzga, eds. Print.
  • “Nostra.” Buenos Aires Poetry. Revista & editorial de poesía. Juan Arabia, Poetry Editor. (June 27, 2021). Digital.

Poetry Translations in Literary Journals and Magazines (Selection)[edit]

As Literary Translator

  • Corless-Smith, Martin. “Nada ha trascendido la muerte.” Perfil. Narcolepsia. Coordinated for an approximation to poetry, Juan Arabia, ed., Buenos Aires (September 26, 2021): 5. Print. (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).
  • Gander, Forrest. “Postfuego forestal,” nexos, Álvaro Ruiz Rodilla, ed., Mexico City, November 12, 2022. Digital. (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).
  • Gander, Forrest. “Hijo.” Perfil. Narcolepsia. Coordinated for an approximation to poetry, Juan Arabia, ed. Buenos Aires (February 6, 2022): 5. Print. (Rep. in Buenos Aires poetry, February 19, 2021). (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).
  • Seshadri, Vijay. “Cliffhanging.” Perfil. Narcolepsia. Coordinated for an approximation to poetry, Juan Arabia, ed., Buenos Aires (April 30, 2022): 5. Print. (Rep. in Buenos Aires poetry, May 2, 2022). (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).
  • Swensen, Cole. “Vientos.” Perfil. Narcolepsia. Coordinated for an approximation to poetry, Juan Arabia, ed., Buenos Aires (December 11, 2022): 5. Print. (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).  
  • Waldrop, Rosmarie. “Profundo tono,“ ”Pensar.” Buenos Aires Poetry. Pipa passes | Poesía Estados Unidos, Juan Arabia ed., Buenos Aires, January 22, 2023. Digital (English to Spanish in collaboration with Graciela S. Guglielmone).
  • Yadav, Ramashankar [Vidrohi]. “Mohenjo Daro.” Asymptote, Indian Language Literature Feature, January 16, 2017. Digital. (Rep. in The Wire, January 28, 2017). (Hindi to English in collaboration with Rashmi Gajare).

Translation (Documentary)[edit]

On Translation / Literary Criticism (In Journals) (Selection)[edit]

Literary Criticism & Scholarly Articles in Peer-reviewed Journals (Org. chronol.)[edit]

  • “Addendum to The Complete Works of Álvaro de Campos.” In Pessoa Plural, nº 23. Jerónimo Pizarro, editor in chief, Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes. (Spring 2023): 89-157. Digital. (In collaboration with Margaret Jull Costa). [Doi]
  • “Milton, Anon e Prosódia na Trilogia dos Gigantes.” Teatro Estático. In Pessoa Plural, nº 19. Onésimo Almeida, Paulo de Medeiros, and Jerónimo Pizarro, eds., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes. (Fall 2021): 1-83. Digital. (In collaboration with Teresa Felipe). [Doi]
  • “’A Rhythm of Another Speech.’ Pessoa’s Theory and Practice of Poetry Translation.” Fernando Pessoa and Translation. Paulo de Medeiros & Jerónimo Pizarro, guest eds. The Translator, Loredana Polezzi and Rita Wilson, eds. Vol. 26, Number 4 (December 2020):  324-354. Print & Digital. (In collaboration with Claudia J. Fischer). [Doi]
  • “The Poems of Frederick Wyatt.” Inside the Mask: The English Poetry of Fernando Pessoa. In Pessoa Plural, Special Issue, nº 10, Patricio Ferrari, guest ed. Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes. Homage to George Monteiro (Fall 2016): 226-301. Print & Digital. (In collaboration with Carlos Pittella). [Doi]
  • “Twenty-one Haikus by Fernando Pessoa.” Pessoa Plural, nº 9, Fabrizio Boscaglia and Duarte Drumond Braga, guest eds., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes (Spring 2016): 184-229. Digital. (In collaboration with Carlos Pittella). [Doi]
  • “Bridging Archives: Twenty-five Unpublished English Poems by Fernando Pessoa.” Pessoa Plural, nº 8, Carlos Pittella, guest ed., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes (Fall 2015): 365-431. Print & Digital. [Doi]
  • “Four Unpublished English Sonnets (and the Editorial Status of Pessoa’s English Poetry).” Fernando Pessoa as English Reader and Writer. Portuguese Literary & Cultural Studies, Patricio Ferrari and Jerónimo Pizarro, guest eds., nº 28, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, Tagus Press (Spring 2015): 227-246. Print. (In collaboration with Carlos Pittella).
  • “Pessoa and Borges: In the Margins of Milton.” Variaciones Borges, Daniel Balderston, ed., nº 40, University of Pittsburgh (Fall 2015): 3-21. Print.
  • “Proverbs in Fernando Pessoa’s Works.” Proverbium: Yearbook of International Proverb Scholarship, Wolfgang Mieder, editor-in-chief, The University of Vermont, vol. 31 (Fall 2014): 235-254. Print. (Rep. In Fernando Pessoa, K. David Jackson, Academic Advisor, Cengage/Gale, 2022).
  • “Pessoa on Camões’s Os Lusíadas: Meter, Grammar and Rhythm.” Rhythmica, Revista Española de Métrica Comparada, María Victoria Utrera Torremocha, ed., year XII, nº 12 (Fall 2014): 11-51. Print. (In collaboration with Javier Arias).
  • “Fernando Pessoa e Ofélia Queiroz: objectos de amor.” Pessoa Plural, nº 4, Onésimo Almeida, Paulo de Medeiros, and Jerónimo Pizarro, eds., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes (Fall 2013): 154-197. Digital. (In collaboration with Jeróniom Pizarro & Antonio Cardiello). [Doi]
  • “Genetic Criticism and the Relevance of Metrics in Editing Pessoa’s Poetry.” Pessoa Plural, nº 2, Onésimo Almeida, Paulo de Medeiros, and Jerónimo Pizarro, eds., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes (Fall 2012): 1-57. Digital. [Doi]
  • “Fernando Pessoa and Aleister Crowley: New discoveries and a new analysis of the documents in the Gerald Yorke Collection.” Pessoa Plural, nº 1, Onésimo Almeida, Paulo de Medeiros, and Jerónimo Pizarro, eds., Brown University, Warwick University, University of Los Andes (Spring 2012): 284-313. Digital. (In collaboration with Marco Pasi). [Doi]
  • “On the Margins of Fernando Pessoa’s Private Library: A Reassessment of the Role of Marginalia in the Creation and Development of the Pre-heteronyms and in Caeiro’s Literary Production.” Luso-Brazilian Review, vol. 48, nº 2, University of Wisconsin-Madison (Fall 2011): 23-71. Print. [Jstor].
  • “Fernando Pessoa y Alejandra Pizarnik: escritos, marginalia y otros apuntes en torno a la métrica y al ritmo.” Bulletin of Spanish Studies: Hispanic Studies and Researches on Spain, Portugal and Latin America, volume LXXXVIII, nº 2, University of Glasgow (March 2011): 221-48. Print. [Doi]
  • “Fernando Pessoa as a Writing-reader: Some Justifications for a Complete Digital Edition of his Marginalia.” Portuguese Studies, vol. 24, nº 2, special issue dedicated to Fernando Pessoa, Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, King's College London, Jerónimo Pizarro and Steffen Dix, guest eds. (2008): 69-114. Print. [Jstor]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Patricio Ferrari literary profile in Poetry Foundation
  2. ^ San Patricio Language Institute
  3. ^ Article on author in Perfil
  4. ^ San Patricio Language Institute Timeline
  5. ^ 1995 Men’s Soccer Roster at Slippery Rock
  6. ^ Cover letter in French for the Collège International
  7. ^ Author's profile, Perfil newspaper, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  8. ^ Author's profile, Perfil newspaper, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  9. ^ Literary scholar profile at the ITEM, Paris
  10. ^ Part of this study featured in Variaciones Borges, n.40, 2015
  11. ^ Article published in Portuguese Studies, vol. 24, n. 2, 2008
  12. ^ Article published in Luso-Brazilian Review, vol. 48, n. 2, 2011
  13. ^ Article featured on the Casa Fernando Pessoa website, 2010
  14. ^ Eu sou uma antologia: 136 autores fictícios [I am an Anthology: 136 fictitious authors], ed. By Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari (Lisbon 2013) featuring writings in the three languages in which Pessoa wrote
  15. ^ Fernando Pessoa’s Private Library, Lisbon, D. Quixote, 2010
  16. ^ Fernando Pessoa’s Private Library available online with open access since October 2010
  17. ^ Thesis database at the University of Lisbon
  18. ^ "Pessoa and Aleister Crowley: New discoveries and a new analysis of the documents in the Gerald Yorke Collection,” Pessoa Plural, n. 2, 2012 (co-authored with Marco Pasi)
  19. ^ "Writer's and their Libraries," International Conference held at the Institute of English Studies, University of London, March 15-16, 2013
  20. ^ "Meter and Poetic Rhythm, or Suggestiveness in Poetry” at Stockholm University, August 29-31, 2013
  21. ^ “The Poems of Frederick Wyatt” by Fernando Pessoa, Pessoa Plural, n. 10, 2016 (co-authored with Carlos Pittella)
  22. ^ Pessoa as an English Reader and Writer, UMass: Tagus Press, 2015 (co-edited with Jerónimo Pizarro)
  23. ^ Initially published in Pessoa Plural, n. 10, 2016, guest ed. by Patricio Ferrari
  24. ^ Patricio Ferrari, ed., Inside the Mask: The English Poetry of Fernando Pessoa (Providence [RI], Gávea-Brown, 2018)
  25. ^ Article featured in the Luso-Brazilian Review, vol. 48, n. 2, 2011
  26. ^ Articles by Patricio Ferrari featured in Pessoa Plural between 2012 and 2023
  27. ^ Article featured in Portuguese Studies, vol. 24, n. 2, 2008
  28. ^ Article featured in Proverbium, vol. 31, 2014
  29. ^ Article featured in Rhythmica, vol. 12, 2014 (in col. with Javier Arias Navarro]
  30. ^ Article featured in The Translator, vol. 26, n. 4, 2020 (in col. with Claudia J. Fischer)
  31. ^ Article featured in Variaciones Borges, vol. 40, 2015
  32. ^ Profile, Department of Spanish and Portuguese Studies at Rutgers-University-Newark
  33. ^ Profile, MFA in Writing at Sarah Lawrence College
  34. ^ Nino Provenzano interviewed by Patricio Ferrari (interviewed conducted in Italian and Sicilian, New York City, Jan. 21, 2017)
  35. ^ Profile at San Patricio Language Institute
  36. ^ Thesis database at Brown University
  37. ^ Poems featured in Fence magazine issue # 40, 2022
  38. ^ Poems featured in Asymptote, Winter 2023
  39. ^ Poem featured in Buenos Aires Poetry, June 27, 2021
  40. ^ “The City and the Writer: In Lisbon with Patricio Ferrari” by Nathalie Handal, Words Without Borders, March 30, 2020
  41. ^ Author’s profile, Poetry Foundation
  42. ^ The Galloping Hour: French Poems by Alejandra Pizarnik (ed. by Patricio Ferrari, co-translated with Forrest Gander; New Directions, 2018
  43. ^ The Complete Works of Álvaro de Campos, ed. by Jerónimo Pizarro and Antonic Cardiello, translated by Margaret Jull Costa and Patricio Ferrari, New Directions, 2023
  44. ^ Habla terreña [Field Talk] by Frank Stanford, Bilingual edition, annotated and translated by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela S. Guglielmone, preface by James McWilliams, Pre-textos, 2023
  45. ^ Amuletos [Amulets] by Laynie Browne, Bilingual edition, translated by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela Guglielmone, Zindo & Gafuri, 2018
  46. ^ Verde amargo [Bitter Green], translated by Patricio Ferrari and Graciela Guglielmone, preface by Cole Swensen, postface by Patricio Ferrari, Buenos Aires Poetry, 2022
  47. ^ “A Meaning” by António Osório, translated from the Portuguese in col. With Susan M. Brown, The New Yorker, May, 30, 2022 (audio and text)
  48. ^ Translation from the Hindi featured in Asymptote, 2017 (co-translated with Rashmi Gajare)
  49. ^ Lois Roth Honorable Mention for literary translation, 2022
  50. ^ The Complete Works of Alberto Caeiro, edited by Jerónimo Pizarro and Patricio Ferrari, translated from the Portuguese by Margaret Jull Costa and Patricio Ferrari, New Directions, 2020
  51. ^ Literary Scholar profile, Comparative Literature Center at the University of Lisbon
  52. ^ “The City and the Writer: In Lisbon with Patricio Ferrari” by Nathalie Handal, Words Without Borders, March 30, 2020
  53. ^ Author’s profile, Poetry Foundation
  54. ^ A Brooklyn Rail reading curated by Juan Arabia and Patricio Ferrari, March 8, 2023
  55. ^ On Pizarnik’s French poems at the Library of Congress with Forrest Gander and Anna Deeny, March 6, 2019
  56. ^ On Fernando Pessoa with Maya Popa at 192 Books in NYC, October 18, 2023
  57. ^ Editorial Board at Pessoa Plural, Brown University, Jerónimo Pizarro, editor-in-chief
  58. ^ Foreign correspondent profile, ITEM, Paris

External links[edit]