Victoria de Stefano
Italian-Venezuelan writer (1940–2023)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victoria de Stefano (21 June 1940 – 6 January 2023) was an Italo-Venezuelan writer, philosopher, and educator, best known for her work as a novelist and essayist.
Victoria de Stefano | |
|---|---|
De Stefano in 2016 | |
| Born | Victoria de Stefano 21 June 1940 |
| Died | 6 January 2023 (aged 82) Caracas, Venezuela |
| Occupation | Novelist |
| Spouse | Pedro Duno |
Early life and education
Victoria de Stefano was born in Rimini, Italy, in 1940, and moved to Venezuela with her family in 1946. She reflects this experience in Su vida, a collection of autobiographical texts published in 2019.[1]
She studied at the Instituto Politécnico Educacional.[2] She graduated with a degree in philosophy from the Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV) in 1962.[3]
Exile
Return to Venezuela
De Stefano and her family returned to Caracas in 1966. There, she worked as a researcher at the Institute of Philosophy at the Universidad Central de Venezuela and taught Aesthetics, Contemporary Philosophy, and Art Theory at both the School of Philosophy and the School of Art.[3]
Personal life and death
Publications
De Stefano's works include:[6]
- El desolvido (1971),
- Sartre y el marxismo (1975)
- La noche llama la noche (1985),
- Poesía y Modernidad, Baudelaire (1984)
- El lugar del escritor (1990)
- Cabo de vida (1993)
- Historias de la marcha a pie (1997)
- Lluvia (Barcelona: Candaya, 2002)
- Paleografías (2010)
- Historias de la marcha a pie (Reed. 2013)
- Su vida (El Taller Blanco Ediciones, Bogotá. 2019 )
- Venimos, vamos (Planeta, 2019)
Prizes
De Stefano won the following prizes:[7]
- Premio Municipal de Ensayo (1984)
- Finalist in the Premio Internacional de Novela Rómulo Gallegos (1999)
- Premio Municipal de Novela (2006).