María Luisa Fernández Bascuñán (1870–1938), also known as María Luisa Fernández de García Huidobro and by the literary pseudonym Monna Lissa, was a Chilean feminist writer, editor, and poet.[2] She was the mother of poet Vicente Huidobro (1893–1948).[3]
Career
María Luisa Fernández wrote novels and religious poetry,[4] as well as editing feminist magazines, such as that of the Chilean Women's Patriotic Union – a group she organized[5] – and Aliada (1922).[6]
Part of her literary output is known to be unpublished or scattered in newspapers and magazines – as is also the case with other feminist writers such as Luisa Lynch, Sara Hübner de Fresno, and the sisters Ximena and Carmen Morla Lynch.[2] Her literary work is considered to be part of the early 20th century avant-garde that sought to massify feminist thinking and fight for women's rights.
Oraciones de mi madre para mis hijos (Santiago: Imprenta y encuadernación Chile, 1905)
Vida de la santísima Virgen María, madre de Dios (Santiago: Impr. Chile, 1935)
María del Carmen (novel, Santiago: Impr. Claret, 1930)
References
^Vega, Carlos B. (2007). Hombres y mujeres de América: diccionario biográfico-genealógico de nuestros progenitores, siglos XVI-XIX [Men and Women of America: Biographical-Genealogical Dictionary of Our Progenitors, 19th–20th Centuries] (in Spanish). University of León Secretary of Publications and Audiovisual Media. p. 133. ISBN9788497733601.
^ abSubercaseaux, Bernardo (1 January 1997). Genealogía de la vanguardia en Chile [Genealogy of the Avant-Garde in Chile] (in Spanish). University of Chile Faculty of Philosophy and Humanities. p. 57.
^Teigelboim, Volodia (1993). Huidobro: La marcha infinita [Huidobro: The Infinite March] (in Spanish). BAT.
^Klimpel Alvarado, Felícitas (1962). La Mujer Chilena: El Aporte Femenino Al Progreso de Chile, 1910–1960 [The Chilean Woman: The Female Contribution to the Progress of Chile, 1910–1960] (in Spanish). Andrés Bello.