Alegría, Claribel

Alegría, Claribel, 1924–2018, Nicaraguan-Salvadoran poet, b. Nicaragua as Clara Isabel Alegría Vides, grad. George Washington Univ. (B.A., 1948). Her family went into exile in El Salvador when she was an infant. She wrote more than 40 volumes of poetry in an imagistic and lyrical style; her first book of poetry, Anillo de Silencio [ring of silence], was published the year she graduated from college. Among her other collections are Sobrevivo [I survive] (1978), La Mujer del río/Woman of the River (1989), and Saudade/Sorrow (1999). She was critical of the Salvadoran government and lived largely abroad or in exile for many years. She and her husband, Darwin J. Flakoll, settled in Nicaragua in 1985, where she supported the Sandinistas. Though she mostly wrote about the difficult daily lives of ordinary people and her own sorrows, her writing also reflected Latin America's political struggles, particularly in her fiction, nonfiction, and journalism, some of which she wrote in collaboration with Flakoll. Her fiction, such as the three novellas of the 1970s and 80s translated as Family Album (1995), often marries magical realism and sociopolitical themes.

See S. M. Boschetto and M. P. McGowan, Claribel Alegría and Central American Literature: Critical Essays (1994).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Latin American Literature: Biographies