Descendant of slaves, staunch feminist, and defender of the socialist Cuban Revolution, Herrera’s frank social criticism melds with her personal lyricism to produce a unique voice in Latin American poetry.
See this video where the famous Cuban writer Reads Her Poetry.
The Cuban intellectual Georgina Herrera (Havana, 1936) has received in 2014 the Mackandal Award from the Teatro Cimarron Company, directed by poet and playwright Alberto Curbelo.
Born in Jovellanos in the province of Matanzas in 1936, Georgina Herrera has lived in Havana since before the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. Known as a poet, Herrera has also written for radio and television series and authored numerous dramas in addition to drafting film scripts and a memoir in collaboration with Daisy Rubiera entitled Golpeando la memoria: Testimonio de una poeta cubana afrodescendiente (Ediciones Unión 2005. Her writing revolves around themes of gender, Afro-Cuban history, and the African legacy.
After publishing her first collection of poems, GH, with the press Ediciones El Puente, seven more collections followed: África (Ediciones Manglar y Uvero, 2006),Gentes y cosas (Ediciones Unión,1974), Granos de sol y luna (Ediciones Unión, 1974),Grande es el tiempo (Ediciones Unión,1989), Gustadas sensaciones (Ediciones Unión, 1996), Gritos (Torre de Papel, 2004),and Gatos y liebres or Libro de las conciliaciones(Ediciones Unión, 2010). Her work has been translated to various languages and has won much recognition abroad and in Cuba.