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Inés Marful

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Inés Marful
Born1961 (age 62–63)
Mieres, Spain
OccupationWriter, visual artist
LanguageSpanish
Alma materUniversity of Oviedo (Ph.D)
GenreLiterary theory, novels, poetry
SubjectFederico García Lorca
Notable works
  • Lorca y sus dobles
  • Historia teoria literaria vol. I
  • Cuatro Cuentos de Amor y El Intocable Absurdo
Notable awardsCasino Mieres Novel Award

Inés Marful (born 1961), also known as Inés Marful Amor, is a Spanish scholar, writer, and visual artist from Asturias,[1] known for her scholarly work about Federico García Lorca. Her novel Cuatro Cuentos de Amor y El Intocable Absurdo won the 2008 Casino Mieres Novel Award.

Biography

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Marful was born in 1961 in Mieres, Spain.[2] She holds a doctorate in Spanish literature from the University of Oviedo, and has worked as a professor at the University of Oviedo and University of Valladolid.[2][3][4] After 1999, Marful worked as a political counselor in the government of Spain and as a photojournalist and columnist.[4]

Writing

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Marful has written scholarly analyses of the works of Federico García Lorca,[5] as well as several novels. Her work includes a critical essay titled "Passion and Death in Lorquian Drama" (Pasión y muerte en el drama lorquiano), published in the 1987 collection A Federico García Lorca.[6] She is the author of Lorca y sus dobles (Lorca and his doubles), an essay described by Manuel Alvar in Blanco y Negro as "the definitive work on the poet from Granada".[4]

Her novels include Te sucederá lo que al río en primavera (You will be as the river in springtime), published in 1998 and described as a "misiva de una mujer a su madre fallecida" ("letter from a woman to her deceased mother") by Ramón Massó Ortega in Historia Sinóptica de la Literatura Española.[7] She also wrote Instrucciones para olvidar (Instructions to forget), published in 2008 and described as "una magnífica novela que huele a agua de lluvia y de mar" ("a magnificent novel that smells of rain and sea water") by María Castrejón in Que Me Estoy Muriendo De Agua: Guía de narrativa lésbica española.[8]

Her 2008 novel Cuatro Cuentos de Amor y El Intocable Absurdo (Four tales of love and the untouchable absurd) won the 2008 Casino Mieres Novel Award.[2] She is the third woman to win the prize since the awards were founded in 1980.[2]

Visual art

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Marful has worked with the Swiss photographer Su Alonso[9] to create artwork as "Alonso y Marful."[1] As of 2022, she is the director of Herrería de la Luna, a center for art and poetry, at the Free University of Boimouro.[1]

Selected publications

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Literary theory

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  • Inés Marful (1990). "Apuntes para una psicocrítica del teatro loriquiano: de la obra juvenil a las farsas". In Marful, Inés (ed.). Lecturas del texto dramático: variaciones sobre la obra de Lorca. Oviedo: University de Oviedo. pp. 43–66. ISBN 9788474682694.[10]
  • Marful Amor, Inés (1991). Lorca y sus dobles: interpretación psicoanalítica de la obra dramática y dibujística. Kassel: Ed. Reichenberger [u.a.] ISBN 9783928064255.[11][12]
  • Bobes, C.; Baamonde, G.; Cueto, M.; Frechilla, E.; Marful, I. (1995). Historia teoria literaria vol. I: La Antigüedad Grecolatina (in Spanish). Madrid: Gredos. ISBN 978-84-249-1675-6.[13]
  • Inés Marful Amor (1999). "La autobiograpia imposible de Louis Althusser". In Tomás, Esteban Agulló; Fernández Alonso, Jose A.; Fernández de Valle, Jorge; García Alvarez, Ana I.; Grossi Queipo, Javier (eds.). Siglo XXI: problemas, perspectivas y desafíos. Oviedo: Universidad de Oviedo. pp. 241–254. ISBN 9788483171332.

Novels

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Inés Marful, quemar las palabras". El Cuaderno (in Spanish). 1 November 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Vivas, Julio (23 October 2008). "Marful recoge emocionada el premio del Casino de Mieres". El Comercio (in European Spanish). Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  3. ^ Tomás, Esteban Agulló (1999). Siglo XXI: problemas, perspectivas y desafíos (in Spanish). Universidad de Oviedo. p. 13. ISBN 978-84-8317-133-2.
  4. ^ a b c "Inés Marful". KRK Ediciones. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  5. ^ López Alonso, Antonio (2002). La angustia de Federico García Lorca: la palabra como síntoma. Algaba Ediciones. p. 15. ISBN 9788496107014. Inés Marful Amor, con su estudio psicoanalítico de la obra dramática y dibujística del poeta, me ha obligado a ponerme al día, en el campo de la corriente psicoanalítica lorquiana.
  6. ^ Sahuquillo, Ángel; Frouman-Smith, Erica; Mira, Alberto (2007). Federico García Lorca and the culture of male homosexuality. Jefferson (N.C.): McFarland & Company. p. 53. ISBN 9780786428977. Retrieved 2 July 2023. Of the many works it contains, the one by Inés Marful, "Passion and Death in Lorquian Drama" (Pasión y muerte en el drama lorquiano) is of special importance.
  7. ^ Massó Ortega, Ramón (2005). Historia sinóptica de la literatura española: introducciones, cuadros sinópticos y anexos. Alicante: Ed. Agua Clara. p. 347. ISBN 9788480182539.
  8. ^ Castrejón, María (2008). Que me estoy muriendo de agua: guía de narrativa lésbica española. Barcelona: Egales. p. 250. ISBN 9788488052681. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  9. ^ R, P. (29 September 2014). "Las "Palabras para un rostro" de Inés Marful y Su Alonso, en Suecia". La Nueva España (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  10. ^ McDermid, Paul (2007). Love, desire and identity in the theatre of Federico García Lorca. Woodbridge: Tamesis. p. 144. ISBN 9781855661462. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  11. ^ Soria, Giuliano; Paz Gago, José María (2012). "A las cinco de la tarde": nove traduzioni italiane del "Llanto por Ignacio Sánchez Mejías" di Federico García Lorca. Roma: Edizioni Nuova Cultura. p. 12. ISBN 9788861347717. Así, Inés Marful, en Lorca y sus dobles. Interpretación psicoanalítica de la obra dramática y dibujística1, llega a conclusiones clarificadoras de sus principales obras dramáticas...
  12. ^ Reviews of Lorca y sus dobles
  13. ^ Reviews of Historia teoria literaria vol. I
  14. ^ Garcia Rodriguez, Javier (1999). "Te sucederá lo que al río en primavera, de Inés Marful". Clarín. 4 (19–24): 20, 74–75.
  15. ^ "Ines Marful - Biografía y mejores libros". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 20 November 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
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