In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Mateo and the second or maternal family name is Martínez.
Andrés Luciano Mateo Martínez (born 30 November 1946) is a Dominican writer, novelist, poet, philologist, educator, literary critic, essayist, researcher and philosopher. He was the winner of the National Literature Prize in 2004.[1]
Biography
Andrés L. Mateo was born in Santo Domingo in 1946. The son of Antonio Mateo Peguero and Guadalupe Martínez Reyes, his primary education studies were at the Colegio San Juan Bosco, where he wrote his first novel, Pisando los dedos de Dios. He then attended high school at the Liceo Juan Pablo Duarte, where he was the first student leader of the Asociación Nacional de Estudiantes de Liceos Intermedios; he also served as an assistant to the philosopher Armando Cordero. While studying at the lyceum, he began writing for El Caribe, which published his first poems.[2]
Mateo received his Bachelor of Arts degree from the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo.[1] In 1971, he went to Cuba to study and in 1977 he obtained a degree in American Literature at the University of Havana. In 1993, he received a Ph.D. in Philological Sciences[1] at the university for his work on the myths and culture of the Dominican Republican capital of Santo Domingo. In 1978, Mateo returned to the Dominican Republic where he became a prolific writer in the national newspapers, and was appointed co-director of Coloquio literary supplement to the newspaper El Siglo. He became a Professor of literature at the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo.[3]
In 1981, he was awarded the National Novel Prize by the Ministry of Education, Fine Arts and Culture for Pisar los dedos de Dios. His 1992 novel, La Balada de Alfonsina Bairán, also won an award, and in 1994, he received the National Essay Prize for his essay on Mito y Cultura en la Era de Trujillo. In 1999, he received the Dominican Journalistic Excellence Award for his newspaper column "Sobre el tiempo presente", published in Listin Diario.[1][3] He won the National Literature Prize in 2004. Other novels include La otra Penélope (1982) and El Violín de la Adúltera (The Violin of Adultery) (2007); the latter is based on real incidents which occurred in the Don Bosco neighborhood where Mateo grew up.[3][4] Mataeo's novel La balada de Alfonsina Bairán is set in a brothel during the Trujillo regime.[5] Along with Tony Raful and Pedro Peix, Mateo hosted the television programme titled "Peria de Tres" (Circle of Three).[6]
Views
Mateo has observed that in the Dominican Republic under the dictatorial regime of Rafael Trujillo, the cultural aspect of Dominican history received a prominent place.[7] He also noted that there was a pessimistic view in the country on the development and furtherance of social norms caused by political factors; particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when there was a "Golden age" perception of the country.[8] Mateo in his article published in the Listín Diario has highlighted the period of terror and fear inflicted on the people of the country during the period 1930–1961, and bemoans that Trujillism had frighteningly become bigger than Trujillo himself, which had denied freedom of thought to the people and the press.[9]
Selected works
1 poesía (1969; with Rafael Abreu Mejía; Mateo Morrison; et al.)[3]
^ ab"Andrés L. Mateo" (in Spanish). República Dominicana y Comité Científico Técnico General de la encyclopedia. Archived from the original on April 23, 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)