Herminia Brumana

Herminia Catalina Brumana (12 September 1897, Pigüé, Argentina - 9 January 1954, Buenos Aires, Argentina) was an Argentine teacher, writer, journalist, playwright and feminist activist with socialist and anarchist ideas. She wrote nine books and eleven plays, three of them published. She wrote for Mundo Argentino, El Hogar and La Nación, among other periodicals.[1] She actively participated as an anarchist and socialist. She was considered a disciple of Rafael Barrett.

Herminia Brumana

Selected works

Prose

  • Palabritas, 1918.
  • Cabezas de mujeres, 1923
  • Mosaico, 1929
  • La grúa, 1931
  • Tizas de colores, 1932
  • Cartas a las mujeres argentinas, 1936
  • Nuestro Hombre, 1939
  • Me llamo niebla, 1946
  • A Buenos Aires le falta una calle, 1953

Theatre

  • La protagonista olvidada, 1933

Bibliography

  • Bellucci, Mabel (1994). «Anarquismo y feminismo. El movimiento de mujeres anarquistas con sus logros y desafíos hacia principios de siglo». Todo es Historia abril (321): pp. 66–67.
  • Fletcher, Lea (1987). Una mujer llamada Herminia. Buenos Aires: Catálogos Editora.
  • Paniza, Delio (1954). Semblanza de Herminia Brumana. Buenos Aires: Montiel.
  • Rodríguez Tarditi, José (1956). Herminia Brumana, escritora y maestra. Buenos Aires.
  • Sámatan, Marta Elena (1974). Herminia Brumana, la rebelde. Buenos Aires: Plus Ultra.
  • Szlaska de Dujovich, Raquel (1987). Herminia C. Brumana en su proyección docente e intelectual. Buenos Aires: De la autora.
  • Wapnir, Salomón (1964). Perfil y obra de Herminia Brumana. Buenos Aires: Perlado.
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gollark: I thought about how to interpret it, and thought of that, and it was right.
gollark: English is highly redundant. You should be able to extract meaning from terse communications.
gollark: Lack of coherent response to it interpreted as bees at the femtoscale.
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See also

References

  1. Dujovich, Raquel Szlaska de (1987). Herminia C. Brumana en su proyección docente e intelectual (in Spanish). R. Szlaska de Dujovich. p. 61.


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