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Secrets in the Sand: The Young Women of Juarez

AUTHOR

Marjorie Agosín


TRANSLATOR

Celeste Kostopulos-Cooperman

Secrets in the Sand: The Young Women of Juarez

Over the past decade over 350 women around the city of Juárez, Mexico, have been raped and murdered. The remains of these brutalized young women continue to be found scattered in the parched desert, vacant city lots, and roadside ditches. Others are never found.


In Secrets In The Sand, Agosin through her words and images invites her readers to bear witness to the reality that the grieving families of the disappeared and murdered young women face every day.


As a poet and human rights activist Marjorie Agosín has dedicated her life's work to the search for justice and human dignity.

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Marjorie Agosín is a Chilean-American poet and scholar whose work focuses on social justice, feminism, and memory. Her publications include At the Threshold of Memory: New & Selected Poems (2003), The Light of Desire (2010), and I Lived on Butterfly Hill (2014), a young adult novel which won the Pura Belpre medal given by the American Library Association. She has received numerous honors and awards including a Jeanette Rankin Award in Human Rights, a United Nations Leadership Award for Human Rights, the Gabriela Mistral Medal of Honor from the Chilean government, and the Dr. Fritz Redlich Global Mental Health and Human Rights Award. She is the Luella LaMer Slaner Professor in Latin American studies and a professor of Spanish at Wellesley College.

Celeste Kostopulos Cooperman holds an M.A. (1976) and a Ph.D. (1980) in Hispanic Studies from Brown University. She teaches all levels of Spanish language classes and courses in Latin American culture (including Latin American Cinema, The Latin American Short Narrative, and Translation as Art and Craft), and serves as the Director of the Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program. Her special areas of concentration are in modern and contemporary Latin American prose and poetry, women's literature, political and human rights narratives, Latino literature, and translation theory and practice. Her translations of Latin American women's poetry have appeared in Harper's, Human Rights Quarterly, City Lights (San Francisco), The Bitter Oeander (New York), The Index on Censorship (London, England), Agni (Boston University), El Coro (U. Mass. Amherst), The American Voice (Kentucky), The Michigan Quarterly Review, Bridges, Blue Mesa, Black Moon, Americas, and The Massachusetts Review. She has also translated a number of books by Marjorie Agosín, including A Cross and a Star (University of New Mexico, 1995), An Absence of Shadows (New York: White Pine Press, 1998), and Always from Somewhere Else (New York: The Feminist Press, 1999). Recipient of the Outstanding Translation Award from The American Literary Translations Association for Circles of Madness / Circulos de locura: Las madres de la Plaza de Mayo (New York: White Pine Press, 1992), she is also the author of the Lyrical Vision of María Luisa Bombal (London, Tamesis Press), At the Threshold of Memory / Selected and New Poems by Marjorie Agosín, and Secrets in the Sand, The Young Women of Juárez, also with White Pine, a translated volume of poems by Marjorie Agosín for which she wrote the critical introduction. Her most recent publication appears in Rio Bravo, A Journal of Borderlands, "Mujeres en la frontera."

Marjorie Agosín is a Chilean-American poet and scholar whose work focuses on social justice, feminism, and memory. Her publications include At the Threshold of Memory: New & Selected Poems (2003), The Light of Desire (2010), and I Lived on Butterfly Hill (2014), a young adult novel which won the Pura Belpre medal given by the American Library Association. She has received numerous honors and awards including a Jeanette Rankin Award in Human Rights, a United Nations Leadership Award for Human Rights, the Gabriela Mistral Medal of Honor from the Chilean government, and the Dr. Fritz Redlich Global Mental Health and Human Rights Award. She is the Luella LaMer Slaner Professor in Latin American studies and a professor of Spanish at Wellesley College.

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