Maria Teresa Horta
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maria Teresa Mascarenhas Horta (Lisbon, May 20, 1937) is a Portuguese writer.
She is bachelor in the Universidade de Lisboa and she has worked as a journalist. She took part of the Portuguese Feminist Movement with Maria Isabel Barreno and Maria Velho da Costa (the so-called three Marys) and of the Poesia 61 group.
She has published several writings in journals like Diário de Lisboa, A Capital, República, O Século, Diário de Notícias or Jornal de Letras e Artes, and she has been editor in chief of Mulheres magazine.
She is the daughter of Jorge Augusto da Silva Horta, Bastonary of the Order of the Medicine Doctors of Portugal and University Professor, and wife D. Carlota Maria Mascarenhas, of the Marquesses de Fronteira Counts da Torre and Counts de Coculim, and also Marquesses de Alorna (formerly Marquesses de Castelo Novo) and Counts de Assumar.
She is married to Luís Barros and has a son Luís Jorge Horta Barros, born on April 4, 1965, married to Maria Antónia Martins Peças Pereira, and has two sons.
[edit] Works
- Espelho Inicial (1960) (poetry)
- Tatuagem (1961)
- Cidadelas Submersas (1961)
- Verão Coincidente (1962)
- Amor Habitado (1963)
- Candelabro (1964)
- Jardim de Inverno (1966)
- Cronista Não é Recado (1967)
- Minha Senhora de Mim (1967) (poetry)
- Ambas as Mãos sobre o Corpo (1970)
- Novas Cartas Portuguesas (1971)
- Ana (1974)
- Poesia Completa I e II(1983)
- Os Anjos (1983)
- O Transfer (1984)
- Ema (1984)
- Minha Mãe, Meu Amor (1984)
- Rosa Sangrenta (1987)
- Antologia Política (1994)
- A Paixão Segundo Constança H. (1994)
- O Destino (1997)
- A Mãe na Literatura Portuguesa (1999)