"At three or four o'clock in the afternoon,
the hour of cafe con leche, the women of my family gathered in Mama's
living room to speak of important things and to tell stories for the
hundredth time, as if to each other, meant to be overheard by us young
girls, their daughters?"
This quotation comes from the beginning
of Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood by
Judith Ortiz Cofer. Silent Dancing is a collection of semi-autobiographical
essays. In Cofer's own words, it is a collection of short pieces of "creative
non-fiction" (Ocasio 737). Ortiz Cofer defines herself primarily as an
artist. In her works, she explores what it means to be a writer in the
face of negotiating what it means to be a Puerto Rican, an American, and a
woman. Creating individual and community identities is a key aspect of
Ortiz Cofer's life as an author. She is interested in the creative process
and giving voice to the many characters in her life.
Judith Ortiz Cofer was born in
Hormingueros, Puerto Rico on February 24, 1952. Her mother was a young
bride and her father was in the US Navy. She spent her formative years
being shuttled between Puerto Rico and Paterson, New Jersey, where her
father was stationed. Anytime her father was on extended leave, Ortiz
Cofer and her family went back to "the island" to spend time in her
Grandmother's casa, house. In her Grandmother's, or Mama's, casa, she was
introduced to the many cuentos, or tales, of her family. These cuentos
provided Ortiz Cofer with her passion for storytelling.
Ortiz Cofer's mother tried hard to
maintain her island heritage; she always viewed herself as being in
temporary isolation when she found herself on the mainland. She held fast
to the traditions and family values she knew well. Ortiz Cofer's father,
on the other hand, thought that in order for his children to have the best
educational and career opportunities, he had to fight hard to disassociate
himself from his beloved island. He didn't want them to have the limited
choices that he perceived himself to have been faced with as a boy coming
into adulthood. These two opposing worldviews created a disconnect that
Ortiz Cofer attempts to resolve through her writing.
Ortiz Cofer was educated primarily in
the US, except for her first two years of school. Most of her primary and
all of her secondary education was completed in the States. Her formative
years were spent in public school; in the sixth grade, she entered a
private, Catholic school. After riots broke out in 1968, near their home
in Paterson, her family relocated to Georgia where she finished her last
two years of high school. She received her B.A in English at Augusta
College in 1974. She went on to receive her Masters in English at Florida
Atlantic University in 1977. During this time, she attended a graduate
summer program at the prestigious Oxford University where she was an
English Speaking Union of America Fellow.
Ortiz Cofer has been awarded national
fellowships and grants by the Fine Arts Council (1980), National Endowment
for the Arts (1989), the Witter Bynner Foundation (1988) and the Bread
Loaf Writers' Conference (1987). Her first novel, In the Line of the Sun,
was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1989. Subsequently, the novel was
named one of the "Twenty-five most Memorable Books" of that same year. One
of her collections of poetry, Peregrina (1986), was a winning manuscript
in the Riverstone International Chapbook Competition. She has also won the
Pushcart Prize (1990), O. Henry Prize (1994), Anisfield Wolf Award (1994)
and Christ-Janner Award for Creative Research (1998), along with many
other awards and prizes. In the spring of 2001, she acted as a visiting
writer at Vanderbilt University.
It wasn't until Ortiz Cofer had
finished her Masters thesis that she really began to explore the
possibility of becoming a writer. During her extensive research, she found
herself overcome with the need to write a quick poem or story line on the
back of her index cards. Frustrated and disturbed by the idea that
something was missing from her life, she felt that these outbursts of
creativity brought her closer to understanding the crux of these feelings.
Ortiz Cofer states, "It wasn't until I traced this feeling to its source
that I discovered both the cause and answer to my frustration: I needed to
write" (The Latin Deli, 166). Shortly after, encouraged by a colleague,
she sent out a poem and it was published. Poetry is Ortiz Cofer's first
love, but she does not always adhere to its boundaries. She finds her
voice through the use of a variety of genres. Over the years, she has
created poems, essays, novels, short stories and works of creative non-fiction.
According to Ortiz Cofer, "The decision about genre is made when I sit
down and decide the parameters of what I'm writing" (Kallet, 75). Her
ability to move easily between genres mirrors her ability to adapt to her
sometimes conflicting surroundings.
She uses this ability, along with
explorations of language and memory, as tools to negotiate her own voice
in the literary world. The power of words to transform and create meaning
and identity are key themes that thread her works together. For Ortiz
Cofer, words and meaning are intrinsically entwined with memory. In the
beginning of Silent Dancing, Ortiz Cofer discusses the subjective nature
of memory and the importance of claiming memories in order to make them
your own. Ortiz Cofer uses the telling of her memories to represent an
aspect of identity that is transitional and that molds with its context.
Memory is dependent on the emotions of the individual during the process
of recollection. The juxtaposition of Ortiz Cofer's memories in Silent
Dancing provide insight to how Judith Ortiz Cofer defines herself.
Ortiz
Cofer's explorations of identity formations are not only found in the
context of her memories, but also exist in the spaces created between.
Again, she uses language to decipher these spaces. Although she spent most
of her childhood in the U.S., her home life acted as an anchor to her
Puerto Rican past. Her mother was vigilant in keeping their home a
microcosm of the island. Outside the home, Ortiz Cofer dealt in English,
yet within the home her language was Spanish. Ortiz Cofer remembers that
as a child, she often felt that neither language suited her. "I was
constantly made to feel like an oddball by my peers, who made fun of my
two-way accent: a Spanish accent when I spoke English; and, when I spoke
Spanish, I was told that I sounded like a 'Gringa'" (Silent Dancing 17).
Ortiz Cofer's two spoken languages never shed their inherent influence on
each other. Although she writes in English, Ortiz Cofer often intersperses
Spanish words throughout her texts, allowing the two languages to exist
simultaneously. She creates an inter- or trans-lingual reality
(Bruce-Novoa 94). Ortiz Cofer uses her writing to define herself in
relation to the spaces between the cultures in which she finds herself.
She draws on the power of language, genre, and memory to negotiate these
liminal spaces.
Another important aspect of Ortiz
Cofer's writing is her commitment to creating community. She not only uses
her writing to carve out her own sense of identity, she also attempts to
evoke similar responses in others. As she explains in Women in Front of
the Sun, she seeks to inspire and move her readers, "My poetry, my stories,
and my essays concern themselves with the coalescing of languages and
cultures into a vision that had meaning first of all for me; then, if I am
served well by my craft and the transformation occurs, it will also have
meaning for others as art" (Women in Front of the Sun 120).
Currently, Ortiz Cofer lives with her
husband, John Cofer, and has one daughter, Tanya. She is a Franklin
Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Georgia.
She continues to write and to receive high recognition for her work. She
also travels extensively around the country, appearing as a keynote
speaker or featured writer at a variety of institutions. Her novel The
Meaning of Consuelo is set to be released in November 2003.
Judith Ortiz Cofer is the author of the forthcoming
Call Me Maria, a young adult novel; The Meaning of Consuelo, a novel;
Woman in Front of the Sun: On Becoming a Writer, a collection of essays;
The Line of the Sun, a novel; Silent Dancing, a collection of essays and
poetry; two books of poetry, Terms of Survival and Reaching for the
Mainland; and The Latin Deli: Prose and Poetry. Her work has appeared in
The Georgia Review, Kenyon Review, Southern Review, Glamour and other
journals. Her work has been included in numerous textbooks and anthologies
including: Best American Essays 1991, The Norton Book of Women's Lives,
The Norton Introduction to Literature, The Norton Introduction to Poetry,
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, The Pushcart Prize, and the O.
Henry Prize Stories.
The Meaning of Consuelo was selected as one of two
winners of the 2003 Americas Award, sponsored by the National Consortium
of Latin American Studies Programs, for U.S. published titles that
authentically and engagingly portray Latin America, the Caribbean, or
Latinos in the United States. The novel was also included on the New
York Public Library's "Books for the Teen Age 2004 List." A PEN/Martha
Albrand Special Citation in non-fiction was awarded to Professor Cofer for
Silent Dancing as well as the Anisfield Wolf Book Award for The Latin Deli,
and her work has been selected for the Syndicated Fiction Project. She has
received fellowships from the NEA and the Witter Bynner Foundation for
poetry. A collection of short stories, An Island Like You: Stories of the
Barrio, was named a Best Book of the Year, 1995-96 by the American Library
Association. It was awarded the first Pura Belpre medal by REFORMA of ALA
in 1996. La linea del sol, the Spanish translation by Elena Olazagasti-Segovia
of The Line of the Sun, was published in 1997 by the University of Puerto
Rico Press. In 1998, The Year of Our Revolution: New and Selected Stories
and Poems was awarded a Paterson Book Prize by the Poetry Center at
Passaic County Community College. The Spanish translation by Elena
Olazagasti-Segovia of Silent Dancing, Bailando en silencio was published
by Arte Publico Press in 1998.
She is the 1998 recipient of the Christ-Janner Award in
Creative Research from the University of Georgia. The Rockerfeller
Foundation awarded her a residency at the Bellagio, Italy Conference
Center in 1999. During spring 2001, she was Vanderbilt University’s
Gertrude and Harold S. Vanderbilt Visiting Writer in Residence. Judith
Ortiz Cofer is the Franklin Professor of English at the University of
Georgia.
(From Voices from the Gaps)
Works by the Author:
The Meaning of Consuelo (novel), 2003. |
Woman in Front of the Sun: On Becoming a Writer, University of
Georgia Press, 2000. |
The Year of Our Revolution: New and
Selected Stories and Poems, Arte Publico, 1998. |
An Island like You: Stories of the Barrio
(young adult), Orchard Books (New York City), 1995. |
|
|
|
|
The Latin Deli, University of Georgia Press, 1993
|
Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood
(personal essays), Arte Publico, 1990. |
The Line of the Sun (novel), University of Georgia Press (Athens,
GA),1989. |
Terms of Survival (poems), Arte Publico (Houston, TX), 1987
|
|
|
|
|
Peregrina (poems), Riverstone Press (Golden, CO), 1986.
|
Latin Women Pray (chapbook), Florida Arts Gazette Press, 1980.
|
Among the Ancestors (chapbook), Louisville News Press, 1981.
|
The Native Dancer (chapbook), Pteranodon Press, 1981
|
A Love Story Beginning in Spanish (2005) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY:
MY ARTICLES:
Works about the Author:
| Acosta-Belen, Edna. A MELUS interview: Judith Ortiz Cofer. (Poetry
and Poetics), (Interview), MELUS 18.2 (Fall 1993): 83-98. |
| Acosta-Belen, Edna. The Literature of the Puerto Rican National
Minority in the United States. The Bilingual Review 5:1-2 (Jan.-Aug.
1978): 107-16. |
|
Vellón-Benítez, Susan. Palabras
de mujer: Convergencias en el discurso femenino en la narrativa caribeña
de origen hispano escrita en los Estados Unidos.”
Ph. D. Dissertation. Dep.. of Modern Languages, The Florida State
University, 2003.130 pp |
| Baker, Judy. The Unforgettable Images of Poet Judith Ortiz Cofer;
Her Life in Cuentos and Poems.(Essay) The Hispanic Outlook in Higher
Education 13.10 (24 February 2003): 29. |
| Bost, Suzanne. Transgressing Borders: Puerto Rican and Latina
Mestizaje. (Critical Essay). MELUS 25.2 (Summer 2001): 187-109.
|
| Bruce-Novoa, Juan. Ritual in Judith Ortiz Cofer's The Line of the
Sun. (Journal Article).? Confluencia:? Revista Hispanica de Cultura y
Literatura 8.1 (Fall 1992): 61-69. |
| Bruce-Novoa, Juan. Judith Ortiz Cofer?s Rituals of Movement, (Critical
Essay). The Americas Review 19.3-4 (1991): 88-99. |
| Davis, Rocio G. Metanarrative in Ethnic Autobiography for Children:
Laurence Yep's The Lost Garden and Judith Ortiz Cofer's Silent Dancing.(Critical
Essay). MELUS 27.2 (Summer 2002): 139-158. |
| Fabre, Gloria. Liminality, In-Betweenness and Indeterminacy:? Notes
toward an Anthropological Reading? of Judith Ortiz Cofer's The Line of
the Sun."? (Journal Article). Annales du Centre de Recherches sur
l'Amerique Anglophone 18 (1993): 223-232. |
| Faymonville, Carmen. New Transnational Identities in Judith Ortiz
Cofer?s Autobiographical Fiction. (Critical Essay). MELUS 26.2 (Summer
2001): 129-157. |
| Faymonville, Carmen. "Motherland versus Daughterland in Judith Ortiz
Cofer's The Line of the Sun." (Book Article) The Immigrant Experience in
North American Literature: Carving Out a Niche. Editors Katherine B.
Payant and Toby Rose. 1999 |
| Grobman, Laurie. "The Cultural Past and Artistic Creation in Sandra
Cisneros' The House on Mango Street and Judith Ortiz Cofer's Silent
Dancing." (Journal Article). Confluencia: Revista Hispanica de Cultura y
Literatura 11.1 (Fall 1995): 42-29. |
| Kallet, Marilyn. "The Art of Not Forgetting: An Interview with
Judith Ortiz Cofer." (Interview) Prairie Schooner 68.4 (Winter 1994):
68-76. |
| Lee, Sarah. "A Contradiction in Terms: Athens Author Judith Ortiz
Cofer Celebrates Her Multi-Cultural Heritage." Athens Daily News /
Athens Banner Herald 26 November 2000: 1E. |
| Maldonado-DeOliveira, Debora. "The Flying Metaphor: Travel, Cultural
Memory, and Identity in Three Puerto Rican Texts." (Dissertation).
University of Rochester. Dept. of Modern Languages and Cultures, 2000.
|
| Ocasio, Rafael, "Puerto Rican Literature in Georgia: An interview
with Judith Ortiz Cofer." (Interview), The Kenyon Review 14.4 (Fall
1992): 43-51. |
| Ocasio, Rafael. "The infinite variety of the Puerto Rican reality:
an interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer." (Special Issue: Puerto Rican
Women Writers) (Interview) Callaloo 17.3 (Summer 1994): 730-742.
|
| Piedra, Jose. "His and Her Panics." (Journal Article). Dispositio:
Revista Americana de Estudios Comparados y Culturales/American Journal
of Comparative and Cultural Studies 16.41 (1991): 71-93. |
| Rangil, Viviana. "Pro-Claiming a Space: The Poetry of Sandra
Cisneros and Judith Ortiz Cofer." (Critical Essay). Multicultural Review
9.3 (September 2000): 48-51; 54-55. |
| Casebook: Judith Ortiz Cofer.
Prentice Hall Literature Portfolio. Eds. Christy Desmet, D.
Alexis Hart, and Deborah Church Miller. Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2007. 1284-86. |
| "An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer"
conducted by Prentice Hall. Prentice
Hall Literature: World Masterpieces. Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2007. 1142-43. |
| Jago, Carol. Judith Ortiz Cofer in the Classroom: A
Woman in Front of the Sun. The NCTE High School Literature
Series. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English, 2006. (Introduction
available at
http://www.english.uga.edu/~jcofer/JagoIntroduction) |
| Gregg, Julia. "Images of home conjured
in New York deli aisle." Evansville
[IN] Courier Press 13 Aug. 2006. [Refers to poem "The Latin Deli."]
Available at
http://www.courierpress.com/news/2006/aug/13/images-of-home-conjured-in-new-york-deli-aisle/
|
| Norat, Gisella. Review of El Año de nuestra Revolución. Críticas 15 May 2006.
|
| Jones, Sara Askew. "Living in Harmony." Southern Living Apr. 2006
(Georgia Living section) : 42-47. |
| "International diversity office
initiates student advisory board and book club spotlighting UGA faculty
authors." Diversity at UGA 5.2
(Spring 2006): 2. |
| Bolling, Annie. "Stories of Our
World." Teaching Tolerance
Spring 2006: 8-9. |
| "Interview: Cofer." Seeing & Writing 3. Eds. Donald
McQuade and Christine McQuade. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2006.
351. |
| "Professor's poetry book bridges two
worlds." Review of A Love Story
Beginning in Spanish. Columns
20 Feb. 2006. |
| Deroshia, Elizabeth. Review of A Love Story Beginning in Spanish. The Georgia Library Quarterly
Fall 2005. |
| "Author Interview: Judith Ortiz Cofer."
Conducted by Christine McQuade, 2005.
http://bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/seeingandwriting3/interviews/interview3.asp
|
| González, Rigoberto. "Many love
stories emerge from this poet's fine collection." Review of A Love Story Beginning in Spanish. El Paso Times 19 Dec. 2005.
|
| Seagraves, Donny. "Writing in English,
Dreaming in Spanish." Features discussion of A Love Story Beginning in Spanish
and an interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer. Athens Magazine Aug. 2005:
80-81. |
| Newton, Pauline T. Transcultural Women of Late-Twentieth-Century
U.S. American Literature. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing,
2005. Features discussion of Silent
Dancing, The Latin Deli,
and Woman in Front of the Sun
and an interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer. |
| Christian, B. Maria.
Belief in Dialogue: U. S. Latina Writers Confront Their Religious
Heritage. New York: Other Press, 2005. Discusses several of
Judith Ortiz Cofer's poems as well as
The Line of the Sun and Silent
Dancing. |
| Lee, Michael George. An Analysis of the Literature on
Christian Practices and Popular Religion: Implications for Latino/a
Religious Education in the United States. [Dissertation] 2005.
Discusses "El Olvido" from Silent
Dancing. |
| Welsch, Camille-Yvette. Review of A Love Story Beginning in Spanish. ForeWord May/June 2005.
|
| Review of Call Me Maria. School Library Journal 51 (Spring
2005 supplement): 46. |
| Review of Riding Low on the Streets of Gold. School Library Journal 51 (Spring
2005 supplement): 66.
|
| Jago, Carol. "Call Me Ishmael, I Mean,
Maria." Classroom Notes Plus: A
Quarterly of Teaching Ideas Apr. 2005: 1-2. |
| Review of Call Me Maria. Library Media Connection 23.6
(Mar. 2005): 66. |
| Isaacs, Kathleen T. Review of The Meaning of Consuelo. School Library Journal 51 (Mar.
2005): 69. |
| "Celebrate Poetry!" Announcement of
Judith Ortiz Cofer's receipt of the 2004 Americas Award for Children's
and Young Adult Literature. The
Council Chronicle Mar. 2005: 10. |
| Rivera, Camen Haydee. "Judith Ortiz
Cofer." [Biographical Essay.] Latino
and Latina Writers, Vol. 2. The Scribner's Writers Series. New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2004. 917-933. |
| Adams, Lauren. Review of Call Me Maria. Horn Book Magazine 81 (Jan./Feb.
2005): 90. |
| Mattson, Jennifer. Review of Call Me Maria. Booklist 101.7 (1 Dec. 2004):
647. |
| Review of Call Me Maria. Library Journal 50 (Nov. 2004):
138. |
| Review of Call Me Maria. Kirkus Reviews 72 (15 Oct.
2004): 1003. |
| Powers, Jessica. Review of Riding Low on the Streets of Gold.
NewPages.com: Alternatives in Print & Media. http://www.newpages.com/bookreviews/archive/riding_low_streets_of_gold.htm
|
| Jago, Carol. Discussion of The Meaning of Consuelo in "Broadening
Students' Point of V iew One First-Person Narrator at a Time." Voices from the Middle 12.1 (Sept.
2004): 54-55. |
| Mujica, Barbara. "Women Out of the
Ordinary." Features review of The
Meaning of Consuelo. Americas
56.4 (July/Aug. 2004): 59-60. |
| Reyna, Bessy. Review of The Meaning of Consuelo. Multicultural Review Summer
2004: 97. |
| Plevak, Linda L. Review of Riding Low on the Streets of Gold:
Latino Literature for Young Adults. School Library Journal June
2004. |
| Hoffman, Marvin. Review of Riding Low on the Streets of Gold:
Latino Literature for Young Adults. Houston Chronicle 9 May
2004: 21-22. |
| Casanova-Marengo, Ilia. "Los Simbolos
de la Abuela Que Son Tambien Los Deseos del Corazon: En Torno A 'Mas
Espacio'." Contains discussion of
Silent Dancing and The Latin Deli. Dialogo Spring 2004, no. 8.
83-87. |
| Review of The Meaning of Consuelo. Islands
Jan./Feb. 2004: 24-25. |
| Review of Riding Low on the Streets of Gold.
Publishers Weekly 12 Jan. 2004.
|
| Spicer,
Emily. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. San Antonio Express-News
4 January 2004. |
| Maldonado, Patricia. Review of The
Meaning of Consuelo. Hispanic
Magazine 16 (2003): 58. |
| Watrous,
Malena. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. The San Francisco
Chronicle 21 December 2003: M5.
|
| Ford,
Wayne. "For UGA English Professor Judith Ortiz Cofer, Writing is Art."
Interview and Discussion of The Meaning
of Consuelo. The Athens Banner-Herald
14 Dec. 2003. |
| Fisher,
Barbara. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. The Boston Globe 30 Nov. 2003. |
| Sandoval, Emiliana. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. Detroit Free Press
9 Nov. 2003. |
| Perez,
Richard. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. New York Post
12 Nov. 2003: 56. |
| Weaver,
Teresa. "A Talent for Language: Deft Communication Skills Grow from a
Bicultural Life." Interview and Discussion of The Meaning of Consuelo. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
2 Nov. 2003: C2. |
| Benson,
Mary Margaret. Review of The Meaning
of Consuelo. Library Journal
128 (1 Nov. 2003): 126. |
| Seaman,
Donna. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. Booklist
100 (2003): 299. |
| Review
of The Meaning of Consuelo. Kirkus Reviews 14. Sept. 2003:
1141. |
| Zaleski,
Jeff. Review of The Meaning of
Consuelo. Publishers Weekly
250 (11 Aug. 2003): 252. |
| "Judith
Ortiz Cofer." Interview in A Poet's
Truth: Conversations with Latino/Latina Poets.. Ed. Bruce Allen
Dick. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2003. 106-122.
|
| Review
of The Year of Our Revolution: New and
Selected Stories and Poems.
Multicultural Review 12 (June 2003). |
| Davis,
Rocio G. "Metanarrative in Ethnic Autobiography for Children: Laurence
Yep's The Lost Garden and Judith
Ortiz Cofer's Silent Dancing." MELUS 27 (Summer 2002): 139.
|
| Delgado, Teresa. "Prophesy Freedom: Puerto Rican Women's Literature as
a Source for Latina Feminist Theology." In A Reader in Latina Feminist Theology:
Religion and Justice. Eds. Maria Pilar Aquino, Daisy Machado,
and Jeanette Rodriguez. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2002.
23-52. |
| Webster,
Joan Parker. "Silent Dancing: A Storyteller's Memories." In Teaching Through Culture: Strategies
for Reading and Responding to Young Adult Literature. Houston:
Arte Publico Press, 2002. 12-39. |
|
Irizarry, Ylce.
Making it Home: The Neo-Colonial Ethics of Chicano and Latino
Literature After Arrival
(Junot Diaz, Judith Ortiz Cofer, Denise Chaven, Elias Miguel Munoz,
Demetria Martinez). 2002. [dissertation]
|
|
Newton, Pauline T.
Transcultural Women of Late Twentieth-Century American Literature:
First-Generation Immigrants from Islands and Peninsulas
(Judith Ortiz Cofer, Julia Alvarez, Jamaica Kincaid, Antigua, Shirley
Geok-lin Lim, Lan Cao). 2002. [dissertation]
|
|
Torrey, Maria Victoria.
Puerto Rican Authors: Voicing Identity in Puerto Rican Literature
(Piri Thomas, Nicholasa Mohr, Judith Ortiz Cofer, Esmeralda Santiago).
2002. [dissertation]
|
|
Sanchez-Gonzalez, Lisa. “'I Like to be
in America (sic): Three Women’s Texts.” Boricua Literature
New York: New York University Press, 2001. 134-60.
|
|
Lopez, Iraida H. "Formas femeninas de la biculturacion: Borderlands/La
Frontera y Silent Dancing."
Letras Femeninas 27.2 (Fall 2001): 85-101.
|
| "Poet's Choice:
Rita Dove." Washington Post 8
July 2001: BW12. |
|
Faymonville, Carmen. “New Transnational
Identities in Judith Ortiz Cofer’s Autobiographical Fiction.” MELUS
26 (Summer 2001): 129-59.
|
| Review
of Woman in Front of the Sun in
Virginia Quarterly Review 77 (Summer 2001): 97.
|
|
Concanon, Kevin. “Writing Under the Gaze of the Witch: Exile and
Authorship in Judith Ortiz Cofer’s The
Line of the Sun." Confluencia
16 (Spring 2001): 71-82.
|
| "Three Books
Published By UGA Press Win Honors."
Athens Banner-Herald and Athens Daily News 27 Mar. 2001.
|
| Pacheco, Teresa.
Review of Woman in Front of the Sun:
On Becoming A Writer. The
Georgia Library Quarterly Winter 2000: 29. |
| Maldonado-DeOliveira,
Debora. The Flying Metaphor: Travel, Cultural Memory, and Identity
in Three Puerto Rican Texts. 2000. [dissertation]
|
| Noguera, Nancy
Soledad. Nocion, desplazamiento y genero en la escritura
autobiografica de Esmerelda Santiago y Judith Ortiz Cofer. 2000.
[dissertation]
|
| Viviana, Rangil.
"Pro-Claiming a Space: The Poetry of Sandra Cisneros and Judith Ortiz
Cofer." Multicultural Review
9.3 (2000): 48-51, 54-55. |
| Review of Woman in Front of the Sun: On Becoming
a Writer. Library Journal
1 Sept. 2000. |
| Review
of The Year
of Our Revolution: New and Selected Stories and Poems. Puffin
Books September-December 2000. |
| "By and For
Writers: Sleeping With One Eye Open."
[review] Chicago Tribune. 16
Apr. 2000. |
| "Judith Cofer
Named Franklin Professor." The
Franklin Chronicle 3 (Spring 2000) : 1, 6. |
| Faymonville,
Carmen. "Motherland versus Daughterland in Judith Ortiz Cofer's The Line of the Sun." The
Immigrant Experience in North American Literature: Carving Out a Niche.
Eds. Katherine B. Payant and Toby Rose. 1999.
|
| Review of Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance
of a Puerto-Rican Childhood. Small Press Distribution, Books
For Teens, 1999. |
| Colley, Rae M. Carlton.
Review of the career of Judith Ortiz Cofer. Contemporary Southern Writers.
Ed. Roger Matuz. Detroit, London: St. James Press, 1999. 78-81.
|
| Review
of The Year of Our Revolution: New and
Selected Stories and Poems.
Voya June 1999. |
| Foster,
Elaine Dunphy. Review of The Year of Our
Revolution: New and Selected Stories and Poems. Multicultural Review June 1999.
|
| Maldonado, Sheila. Review of
The Year of Our Revolution: New and Selected Stories and Poems.
Latingirl Magazine Apr./May 1999. |
| "Book Marker: Judith Ortiz Cofer" Latingirl Aug.-Sept. 1999: 82.
|
| Karr, Paul. "Quilting of Cultures." The University of Georgia Research
Reporter 28.1 (Fall 1998): 15-18. |
| Montgomery, Cindy. "Writer Judith
Ortiz Cofer Engages Students." English
Department Newsletter. Spring/Summer 1998. Lynchburg
College, Lynchburg, Virginia. |
| "And May He Be
Bilingual: Notes on Writing, Teaching, and Multiculturalism." Women/Writing/ Teaching. Albany,
N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1998. 103-108.
|
| Davidson, Phebe. "Judith Ortiz Cofer:
Drawn to the Outsider." Conversations with the World: American Women
Poets and Their Work. Pasadena, California: Trilogy Books, 1998. 1-36.
|
| Bartkevicius, Jocelyn. "An Interview
with Judith Ortiz Cofer." Speaking of
the Short Story: Interviews with Comtemporary Writers. Jackson,
Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi, 1997. 57-74.
|
|
Gordon,
Stephanie. "An Interview With Judith Cofer."
The AWP Chronicle 30.2 (1997): Cover--9.
|
| Henneberg, Sylvia, University of
Georgia. "The Convergence of Marginal and Mainstream Discourses: Judith
Ortiz Cofer's Terms of Survival."
Paper presented at the seventh annual American Women of Color Conference,
October 31, 1997. |
| Berg, Christine G. "`That ain't
nothing but gin-talk': Storytelling in Judith Ortiz Cofer's Silent Dancing and August
Wilson's Fences." Paper
presented at the seventh annual American Women of Color Conference,
November 1, 1997. |
| Hernandez, Carmen Dolores. "Where is
home? I want to go there." Puerto
Rican Voices: Interviews with Writers. Westport, CT and London:
Praeger Publishers, 1997: 95-105. |
| Ocasio, Rafael. "From Nuyorican
Barrio Literature to Issues on Puerto Rican Literature Outside New York
City: Nicholasa Mohr and Judith Ortiz Cofer." Literature and Ethnic Discrimination.
Ed. Michael J. Meyer. Rodopi Perspectives on Modern Literature. 1997.
|
| Kanellos, Nicolas, editor. Article
on life and work. The Hispanic Literary
Companion. Detroit, New York, Toronto, London: Visible Ink Press,
1997. 229-236. |
| Gibson, Lois Rauch. "From the
Island to the Barrio: Biculturalism in the Books of Judith Ortiz Cofer."
Paper presented at Children's Literature Association Conference.
Charlotte, S.C. 1996. |
| Chick, Nancy L. "Judith Ortiz Cofer:
Creating a Space for Puerto Rican Womanhood." Paper presented at Sixth
National American Women Writers of Color Conference. Salisbury State
University, Ocean City, MD. October 11-13, 1996. |
| "Maxine Hong Kingston and Judith
Ortiz Cofer: Interrogating the Ethnocentrism of the Archetypal Floral
Symbol of Womanhood." Women's Studies Panel of the 1996 SAMLA Convention.
Savannah, GA. November 8-10, 1996. |
| Cooley, Tom, editor. Selected
interview for The Norton Sampler.
New York: W.W. Norton and Co. 1996. |
| Ruiz, Sandra Gutierrez. "Race,
Ethnicity, Gender and Language as Components of U.S. Identity Revealed
in Three U.S. Latina Novels." [Master's Thesis] 1996.
|
| Chick, Nancy. Chapter in UGA
dissertation, Department of English, portions of which have been
accepted for publication in various journals. |
| Works listed in 500 Great Books by Women: A Reader's
Guide, an annotated bibliography, forthcoming from Viking Penguin.
|
| Entry on The Line of the Sun in Masterplots II: Women's Literature.
Ed. Frank Magill. New York: Salem Press, 1995. 1309-1313.
|
| Grobman, Laurie.
"The Cultural Past and Artistic Creation in Sandra Cisneros' The House on Mango Street and
Judith Ortiz Cofer's Silent Dancing." Confluencia: Revista Hispanica de
Cultura y Literatura 11.1 (1995) : 42-29. |
| Entry in Dictionary of Hispanic Biography.
Gale Research, Inc., 1995. |
| Ocasio, Rafael. "An Interview with
Judith Ortiz Cofer." The Americas
Review 22.3-4 (1994): 84-90. |
| Entry in Reference Guide to American Literature,
3rd ed. Ed. Jim Kamp. Detroit: St. James Press, 1994. 203-205.
|
| "The Poetry of Judith Ortiz Cofer." Masterpieces of Latino Literature.
Ed. Frank Magill. New York: Harper Collins, 1994. 452-456.
|
| Noras, Himlice. Entry in Everything You Need to Know About
Latino History. New York: Plume, 1994. 295. |
| Ocasio, Rafael. "The Infinite
Variety of the Puerto Rican Reality."
Callaloo: A Journal of African Arts and Letters 17.3 (Summer
1994): 730-42. |
| Bellver, Pilar. Paper on Silent Dancing presented at
Fifth International Conference of the Association of Hispanic Feminist
Literature, Oct. 20-22, 1994, Davidson College, N.C. |
| Stavans, Ilan. "Art and Anger."
Essay/Review of The Latin Deli
in These Times 18.18 (25 Jul.
1994): 32-34.
|
| Shuman, R. Baird. Essay on body of
work in Magill's Survey of American
Literature 1994: 2330-2337. |
| Shearron, Betsy. Profile in The Athens Observer: Woman 94,
Special Issue, (31 Jul. 1994): 25. |
| Lynch, Amy. Interview in Touchstone: The Magazine of the
Tennessee Humanities Council 25 (Winter 1994): 5-7.
|
|
Acosta-Belen,
Edna. Interview in Melus: The Journal of
the Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United
States 18:3 (1993): 83-97. |
| Sutton, Laura. Article in Flagpole Magazine 7.45 (8 Dec.
1993): 11. |
| Rose, Phyllis. "Writing Our Own
Lives." Ms. 4.2 (Nov. 1993): 78.
|
| Listing in Contemporary Authors, New
revision series, Vol. 32, 1993. |
| Lumpkin, Lisa. Interview for The Habersham Review, Piedmont
College 2.2 (Autumn 1993): 132-147. |
| Fabre, Genevieve.
"Liminality, In-Betweenness and Indeterminacy: Notes toward an
Anthropological Reading of Judith Ortiz Cofer's The Line of the Sun." Annales du Centre de Recherches sur
l'Amerique Anglophone 18 (1993) : 223-32. |
| Gregory, Lucille
H. "The Puerto Rican 'Rainbow': Distortion vs. Complexities." Children's Literature Association
Quarterly 18.1 (1993 Spring) : 29-35. |
| Fuentes, Carlos. "The Mirror of the
Other." The Nation 30 Mar. 1992:
409. |
| Ocasio, Rafael. "Judith Ortiz Cofer:
Diglosia y Narrativa Puertorriquena en Los EEUU." "El Poder Hispano,"
the International Congress of Hispanic Cultures in the United States.
Madrid, Spain. 10 July 1992. A scholarly paper presented by Professor
Ocasio of Agnes Scott College, Department of Spanish. |
|
Ocasio, Rafael and Rita Ganey. "Speaking in Puerto Rican: An Interview
with Judith Ortiz Cofer." The Bilingual
Review 17.2 (1992): 143-46. |
|
Ocasio, Rafael. "Puerto Rican Literature in Georgia?" The Kenyon Review 14.4 (1992):
43-50. |
| Bruce-Novoa, Juan. "Ritual in Judith
Ortiz Cofer's The Line of the Sun." Confluencia 8.1 (1992): 61-69.
|
| Lawhn, Juanita Luna. San Antonio
College, entry in the Oxford Companion
to Women's Writing in the United States, forthcoming.
|
| Bruce-Novoa, Juan, University of
California, Irvine. "Judith Ortiz Cofer's Rituals of Movement." The Americas Review 19.34
(1991): 88-99. |
| Piedra, Jose. "His
and Her Panics." Dispositio: Revista
Americana de Estudios Comparados y Culturales/American Journal of
Comparative and Cultural Studies 16.41 (1991) : 71-93.
|
|
MELUS article:
New transnational identities in Judith Ortiz Cofer's autobiographical
fiction - Critical Essay by Carmen Faymonville |
|
Don't Misread My Signals"--"Hers"
Column from Glamour Magazine |
| Cofer's latest
collection
The Latin Deli
(review and description) |
| A fairly recent
and very well known essay:
"I'm Latina Wherever I Am"
A poem:
"How to Get a Baby |
| Short
Bio and "chat"
with grade school readers |
| Excerpt from
Cofer's essay"Silent
Dancing: A Partial Rememberance of a Puerto Rican Childhood"
(taken off a course assignment page) |
INTERVIEWS:
SHORT BIOGRAPHY
Judith
Ortiz Cofer is the author of the forthcoming
Call Me Maria, a young adult
novel; The Meaning of Consuelo, a novel; Woman in Front of the
Sun: On Becoming a Writer, a collection of essays; The Line of
the Sun, a novel; Silent Dancing, a collection of essays and
poetry; two books of poetry, Terms of Survival and Reaching
for the Mainland; and The Latin Deli: Prose and Poetry. Her
work has appeared in The Georgia Review, Kenyon Review,
Southern Review, Glamour and other journals. Her work has
been included in numerous textbooks and anthologies including: Best
American Essays 1991, The Norton Book of Women's Lives,
The Norton Introduction to Literature, The Norton Introduction to
Poetry, The Heath Anthology of American Literature, The
Pushcart Prize, and the O. Henry Prize Stories.
The Meaning of Consuelo was
selected as one of two winners of the 2003 Americas Award, sponsored by
the National Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs, for U.S.
published titles that authentically and engagingly portray Latin America,
the Caribbean, or Latinos in the United States. The novel was also
included on the New York Public Library's "Books for the Teen Age 2004
List." A PEN/Martha Albrand Special Citation in non-fiction was awarded
to Professor Cofer for Silent Dancing as well as the Anisfield
Wolf Book Award for The Latin Deli, and her work has been
selected for the Syndicated Fiction Project. She has received
fellowships from the NEA and the Witter Bynner Foundation for poetry. A
collection of short stories, An Island Like You: Stories of the
Barrio, was named a Best Book of the Year, 1995-96 by the American
Library Association. It was awarded the first Pura Belpre medal by
REFORMA of ALA in 1996. La linea del sol, the Spanish translation
by Elena Olazagasti-Segovia of The Line of the Sun, was published
in 1997 by the University of Puerto Rico Press. In 1998, The Year of
Our Revolution: New and Selected Stories and Poems was awarded a
Paterson Book Prize by the Poetry Center at Passaic County Community
College. The Spanish translation by Elena Olazagasti-Segovia of
Silent Dancing, Bailando en silencio was published by Arte
Publico Press in 1998.
She is
the 1998 recipient of the Christ-Janner Award in Creative Research from
the University of Georgia. The Rockerfeller Foundation awarded her a
residency at the Bellagio, Italy Conference Center in 1999. During
spring 2001, she was Vanderbilt University’s Gertrude and Harold S.
Vanderbilt Visiting Writer in Residence. Judith Ortiz Cofer is the
Franklin Professor of English at the University of Georgia.
|
|