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Fernando Monteiro de Castro Soromenho : ウィキペディア英語版 | Fernando Monteiro de Castro Soromenho
Fernando Monteiro de Castro Soromenho (Chinde District, Mozambique, 31 January 1910 – São Paulo, 18 June 1968) was a Portuguese journalist and writer of fiction and ethnology. He is regarded both as a Portuguese neo-realist and a novelist of Angolan literature. ==Biography== Born in Mozambique, Castro Soromenho was the son of Artur Ernesto de Castro Soromenho, governor of Lunda, and Stela Fernançole de Leça Monteiro, a native of Porto from a Cape Verdean family. When he was one year old, they moved to Angola. Between 1916 and 1925, he attended primary and secondary school in Lisbon. He then returned to Angola, where he worked for an Angolan diamond company. Following that, he began an entry-level position in government administration, serving in the hinterlands in the eastern region of the colony. Later, he became an editor of the newspaper ''Diário de Luanda''. In 1937 he returned to Lisbon where he worked at several newspapers such as ''Humanidade'' (the weekly edition of the ''Diário Popular''), ''A Noite'', ''Jornal da Tarde'', ''O Século'', ''Seara Nova'', ''O Diabo'', ''O Primeiro de Janeiro'' and ''Dom Casmurro''. He also collaborated on an account of the Portuguese explorers in Africa, No. 12 of the magazine ''Mundo literário'' (1946–1948). In 1949, he married Mercedes de la Cuesta in Argentina. As a consequence of having criticized the Salazar regime in Portugal, he was forced to leave for exile in France in 1960. He later went to the United States, where he taught at the University of Wisconsin for six months in 1961〔Russell G. Hamilton, (Review: Fernando Augusto Albuquerque Mourao and Maria Angêlica Rodrigues Quemel, ''Contribuição a uma Bio-Bibliografia sobre Fernando Monteiro de Castro Soromenho'' ), ''Research in African Literatures'' 10.3 (Winter 1979), pp. 42–44.〕 and directed the program in Portuguese literature. He returned to France in August 1961 and worked at the magazines ''Présence Africane'' and ''Révolution''. In December 1965, he went to live in Brazil, where he spent the rest of his life, teaching courses in the Faculty of Philosophy, Sciences and Humanities at the University of São Paulo and at the Faculty of Philosophy, Sciences and Humanities at Araraquara. He also dedicated himself to the study of Angolan ethnography, having been one of the founders of the Center for African Studies at the University of São Paulo.
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