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Argentina Díaz Lozano
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Argentina Díaz Lozano : ウィキペディア英語版
Argentina Díaz Lozano

Argentina Díaz Lozano (1912-1999) was the pseudonym for the Honduran writer Argentina Bueso Mejía. She was a journalist and novelist, who wrote in the romantic style with feminist themes. She won numerous awards for her books, including the Golden Quetzel from Guatemala, the Honduran National Literature Prize Ramón Rosa" and the "Order Cruzeiro do Sud" from Brazil. She was admitted to the Academia Hondureña de la Lengua and is the only Central American woman whose work has officially contended for a Nobel Prize for Literature.
==Biography==
Argentina Bueso Mejía's birth has been cited as 1909, 1910 and 1917, but is generally accepted as 15 December 1912 in Santa Rosa de Copan, Honduras to businessman Manuel Bueso Pineda and Trinidad Mejía. She attended Coligio María Auxiliadora in Tegucigalpa between 1925 and 1928 and then completed her secondary education at Holy Name Academy in Tampa, Florida. In 1929, she married Porfirio Díaz Lozano and adopted both of his surnames as her literary name.〔 She graduated with a degree in journalism from the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala.〔
She began writing for newspapers while studying in Guatemala and published articles in ''Diario de Centroamerica'', ''La Hora'', ''El Imparcial'', and ''Prensa Libre'' and at one point had a weekly column called "Jueves Literarios" (Literary Thursdays) that was carried in several Guatemalan papers.〔 Her first novel, ''Perlas de mi rosario (cuentos)'' was published in 1930 and followed by several others. Her first important recognition came in 1944 with ''Peregrinaje'' (Pilgrimage), which won first literature prize in Latin American in a contest sponsored by the Pan-American Union and the publisher Farrar & Rinehart. The prize resulted in her book being published in Spanish in Santiago, Chile and in English by Farrar & Rinehart under the title ''Enriqueta and I'', as well as European recognition.〔 Between 1945 and 1955, Díaz Lozano worked in the library of the Institute of Anthropology and History at the University of San Carlos. She was also involved in feminist causes, attending the Primer Congreso Interamericano de Mujeres on behalf of the Comités Pro Paz y Libertad (Committee for Peace and Liberty) of San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa.
Around 1951, she divorced her first husband, keeping his name, and sometime between 1952 and 1954, she married Guatemalan diplomat Darío Morales García. In 1956, Díaz Lozano accompanied Morales to Belgium, where Morales took up a post at the Consul of Guatemala in Antwerp, Belgium.〔 While in Europe, she studied Fine Arts at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands and published several books in French. Her book ''Mansión in la bruma'' was adapted for the stage by Ligia Bernal de Samayoa. In 1964, the book won a Golden Quetzal from Guatemala as best book of the year〔 and Díaz Lozano returned from Belgium to be appointed Cultural Attaché for the Honduran Embassy in Guatemala.〔
In 1967 and 1968, she conducted a series of interviews with the vice president of Guatemala Clemente Marroquín Rojas and though she did not necessarily agree with his politics she found him an interesting personality. In 1968, she published a biography of him and was awarded the Honduran National Literature Prize "Ramón Rosa" and admitted to the Academia Hondureña de la Lengua,〔 as well as receiving the “Order Cruzeiro do Sud” from the government of Brazil.〔 In 1971, she began the magazine ''Revista Istmeña'' and serialized a novel, ''Su hora'' under the pseudonym "Suki Yoto". In 1986, the novel would be published under the name ''Caoba y orquídeas: novela''. In 1973, she published ''Aquel año rojo: novela'' and in June of that year was nominated as a candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Her nomination was accepted and she was an official candidate for the 1974 award.〔 Díaz Lozano is the only Central American Woman whose works have been an official candidate for the Nobel Prize of Literature.
After the 1976 earthquake in Guatemala, Díaz Lozano made her home in Antwerp and traveled back and forth between Belgium and Guatemala, continuing to publish into the 1990s. In February, 1999 she decided to make a trip to visit her homeland in Honduras.〔
Díaz Lozano died on 13 August 1999 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.〔

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