Susana Rotker
Susana Rotker (3 July 1954 – 27 November 2000) was a Venezuelan journalist, columnist, essayist, and writer.[1] BiographyThe daughter of Jewish immigrants, Susana Rotker graduated from Andrés Bello Catholic University in Caracas in 1975, was an assistant professor at the University of Buenos Aires,[2] and received a doctorate in Hispanic literature from the University of Maryland in 1989.[2] She was a professor of Latin American literature and director of the Rutgers Center for Hemispheric Studies in New Jersey.[1] She was a noted film critic in her column "La gran ilusión" in the Caracas newspaper El Nacional.[3][4] Around 1979, she met the Argentine intellectual Tomás Eloy Martínez exiled in Venezuela, with whom she had a daughter Sol Ana in 1986, and with whom she lived until the traffic accident that cost Rotker her life in 2000.[2] She resided in Highland Park, New Jersey.[2] Books
AwardsIn 1991 she received the Casa de las Américas Prize for her work La invención de la crónica about José Martí.[3] She was a Guest Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in 1997.[1][6] References
Further reading
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