Juan Pablo Plata Figueroa

Summary

Juan Pablo Plata (born 1982) is a Colombian writer, journalist and researcher.

Juan Pablo Plata
Born1982
Bogota, Colombia
Occupationnovelist
NationalityColombian - Spanish
Genrefiction, non-fiction
Literary movementLatin American literature

Personal life edit

Plata spent his childhood in Garzón (Huila).[citation needed] He graduated from the Emilio Valenzuela School in Bogotá.[citation needed] He started studying literature at the Universidad de los Andes, but finished his literary studies at the Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá with an emphasis in publishing.

He completed his Master of Fine Arts in the bilingual Creative Writing program at the University of Texas at El Paso.[1][2] He currently lives between Tuvalu, Colombia, and the United States, where he completed a master's degree in creative writing. [3] [4] He has also worked as a seller of art and antiques.[5]

Literary work edit

Plata edited the magazine La movida literaria, together with fellow writers Andrés Mauricio Muñoz and Sebastián Pineda Buitrago which sparked a parody in a blog (La Bobada Literaria) and controversy in the magazines El Malpensante and Arcadia. He edited issue no. 40 and 41 of the bilingual magazine Rio Grande Review from the University of Texas at El Paso. It contained a special annex of bilingual hypermedia literature with contributions from academics such as Scott Rettberg and Leonardo Flores.[2]

He writes literary criticism for Colombian and Mexican media. He currently lives between Tuvalu, Colombia and the United States, where he completed a master's degree in literary creation. He has collaborated with the newspaper El Tiempo, Tras la Cola de la Rata with political columns, Letralia, Diario del Huila, Cuadruvio, El Espectador, Crónica, Banco de Occidente Credential Magazine, Kienyke, Level Magazine, Léase a Plena Noche, La Matera and the Cultural and Bibliographic Bulletin of the Bank of the Republic of Colombia. He classified the literary subgenre Mortara.[citation needed]

Books edit

He was anthologized in the book Umpalá (Sic Editores, 2006), Inhabited heart, and Recent Stories about Love in Colombia (Algaida. Grupo Anaya, 2010. Spain).[6] He published one of the first anthologies of Colombian short-stories in the 21st century, called Signals of path, which featured 27 Colombian authors (Señales de ruta, Arango Editores, 2008 and 2012 ebook re-edition)[7][8][9]

He won two Andiarios journalism awards in 2005 (for a website and for an interview with painter David Manzur) with the magazine La Movida Literaria and a CPB prize in 2006 with the collective journalistic weblog Generación Invisible.[citation needed]

As a researcher, he made a proposal for classification of electronic literature under a literary subgenre called "Mortara", to name hybrid literary works that use previous existing and classified literary genres mix with sound, images, motion pictures, etc., either in print or in hypertext.[10] He was editor in chief of the bilingual Rio Grande Review.[1] In 2018 he published Arqueo de los días (Inventary of days) with Ibáñez Editores and Silver Editions.[11][12][13] It was a non fiction personal anthology of journalism, with interviews (to Enrique Vila-Matas, Tryno Maldonado, Juan Villoro), with chronicles and profiles in Spanish. He was an editor of the literary horror magazine Léase a plena noche in Colombia. He currently works as a contributor to the magazine Crónica.[14]

In 2021, he published his first book of poetry entitled Occult Neon in which he pays tribute to themes of (metaliterature) and writers such as Stefan Zweig, Antonio Machado and Walter Benjamin.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Google Translate".
  2. ^ a b "427: Colombian Literature and the Human Experience".
  3. ^ https://scholarworks.utep.edu/dissertations/AAI27997939/
  4. ^ https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=zl1LwZ8AAAAJ&hl=es
  5. ^ ""En Colombia el arte se mueve todos los meses".Entrevista a Juan Pablo Plata. Escritor y marchante de arte". 17 February 2020.
  6. ^ Gil, José Manuel García (2010). El corazon habitado / Inhabited Heart: Ultimos Cuentos De Amor En Colombia / Recent Stories About Love in Colombia (Spanish Edition): Jose Manuel Garcia Gil: 9788498774597: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 978-8498774597.
  7. ^ "Juan Pablo Plata". Goodreads.
  8. ^ "Eldígoras, noticias: Señales de ruta. Antología de cuento colombiano".
  9. ^ Cárdenas, Juan; Benedetti, Orlando Echeverri; Carbone, Liliana; Santa, Gabriela; Moreno, Javier Arturo; Castilla, María; Perder, Las Filigranas de; Buitrago, Sebastián Pineda; Rodríguez-Bravo, Johann; Rojas, Gerardo Ferro; Varona, Rubén; Álvarez, Juan; Castaño, David Roa; Arroyave, Ignacio Piedrahíta; Obando, Diana Ospina (October 2017). Senales de Ruta: Antologia de Cuento Colombiano (Spanish Edition): 9789582700713: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 978-9582700713.
  10. ^ "Mortara: a proposal for a new literary sub-genre base on hypertext and electronic literature. By Juan Pablo Plata". Scribd. (Title is [sic].)
  11. ^ "Juan Pablo Plata". Arqueo de los días. 23 August 2021.
  12. ^ Juan Pablo Plata. Silver Editions. 16 July 2017. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ "Arqueo de los días - Skepsi".
  14. ^ "Juan Pablo Plata". Coronica journalism pieces.

External links edit

  • Señales de ruta ebook edition 2012
  • Review by author of Gentario by Javier Munguia (Spanish)
  • Colombian fiction 21st century anthology Inhabited heart
  • Senales de ruta in World Catalog
  • Review by author of Inherent vice by Thomas Pynchon. (Spanish)
  • Profile of Christopher Hitchens (Spanish)