Maria Doménech
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Maria Domènech i Escoté (
Alcover Alcover is a municipality in the ''comarca'' of Alt Camp, Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The Prades Mountains are located in the vicinity of this municipality. It is the birthplace of the footballer A football player or footballer is a sport ...
,
Alt Camp Alt Camp () is a comarca (county) in Catalonia, Spain. It is one of the three comarques into which Camp de Tarragona was divided in the comarcal division of 1936. Geography Alt Camp is a county in the province of Tarragona in Catalonia, Spain. T ...
, 1877 —
Barcelona Barcelona ( , , ) is a city on the coast of northeastern Spain. It is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Catalonia, as well as the second most populous municipality of Spain. With a population of 1.6 million within ci ...
, 1952) was a novelist, poet and social activist from the
Catalonia Catalonia (; ca, Catalunya ; Aranese Occitan: ''Catalonha'' ; es, Cataluña ) is an autonomous community of Spain, designated as a '' nationality'' by its Statute of Autonomy. Most of the territory (except the Val d'Aran) lies on the nort ...
region of Spain. While living in Tarragona, she wrote using the pseudonym Josep Miralles. She was later known by her married name, Maria Domènech de Cañellas.


Biography

Maria's father died when she was eight months old. At the age of three, she and her mother moved to
Tarragona Tarragona (, ; Phoenician: ''Tarqon''; la, Tarraco) is a port city located in northeast Spain on the Costa Daurada by the Mediterranean Sea. Founded before the fifth century BC, it is the capital of the Province of Tarragona, and part of Tarr ...
and Maria took private lessons from her mother. Later, she wrote with the philosopher Tomàs Sucona, painted with the painter Hermenegildo Vallvé, and learned music with Father Joan Roca, because she refused to go to the Carmelite school.


Social activist and writer

Domènech contributed to several publications including ''La Pàtria and'' ''Camp de Tarragona'' using the pseudonym Josep Miralles (not to be confused with Bishop Josep Miralles i Sbert (1860-1947)). In 1910, Doménech settled in Barcelona with her husband, a doctor from
Tarragona Tarragona (, ; Phoenician: ''Tarqon''; la, Tarraco) is a port city located in northeast Spain on the Costa Daurada by the Mediterranean Sea. Founded before the fifth century BC, it is the capital of the Province of Tarragona, and part of Tarr ...
, Francesc Cañellas, and their two children. There she started her social activism and collaborated with more magazines: Or i Grana, La Tralla, Feminal,
El Poble Català EL, El or el may refer to: Religion * El (deity), a Semitic word for "God" People * EL (rapper) (born 1983), stage name of Elorm Adablah, a Ghanaian rapper and sound engineer * El DeBarge, music artist * El Franco Lee (1949–2016), American p ...
, Renaixement,
La Veu de Catalunya ''La Veu de Catalunya'' (Catalonia voice) was a Catalan newspaper founded by Enric Prat de la Riba that was published in Barcelona from 1 January 1899 to 8 January 1937, with two editions daily. It was the press organ for the ideological and po ...
. For Feminal (a feminist publication), she had become a local correspondent when she lived in Tarragona, and when the Cañellas family moved to Barcelona, she became a collaborator with the magazine, which disappeared in 1917. According to Cavallé, in those pages, "she published a number of short literary texts, which she would later include in her books." One of her first appearances in public as a social activist was on behalf of the Board of Ladies of the League Against Tuberculosis in
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, in a distribution of awards to mothers who had breastfed their children longer. She took an active part in the Women's Charity Tomb, chaired by
Dolors Monserdà Dolors Monserdà i Vidal (née, Dolors Moncerdà i Vidal; also known as, Dolors Monserdà de Macià; Barcelona, 1845 - 1919) was a Catalan writer, poet, storyteller, playwright, essayist, and columnist. She was the sister of the painter Enric Mon ...
. She was a member of the Public Instruction and Child Protection Boards of Tarragona, member of the Board of the "Liga del Bon Mot" (League of the Good Word), member of the "Junta de Primera Enseñanza de Tarragona" (Board of First Education of Tarragona) and member of the "Junta de Protección a Childhood" (Board to Protect Childhood). She was also the third vice-president of the Women's Federation against Tuberculosis, which was chaired by Leonor Canalejas de Farga. Doménech participated in the women's philanthropic and educational movement, carried out by Francesca Bonnemaison,
Dolors Monserdà Dolors Monserdà i Vidal (née, Dolors Moncerdà i Vidal; also known as, Dolors Monserdà de Macià; Barcelona, 1845 - 1919) was a Catalan writer, poet, storyteller, playwright, essayist, and columnist. She was the sister of the painter Enric Mon ...
and Carme Karr i Alfonsetti. She gave several conferences in favor of women and their status as workers throughout Catalonia and Madrid. In 1912, she founded and chaired the Workers' Federation, with the aim of providing women with access to culture and education, as well as defending their rights as workers. Throughout the years, she was also an active writer. In 1915, Doménech published a collection of poems and narratives entitled ''Verso i prosa, as well as the'' novels ''Neus'' (1914), ''Contrallum'' (1917), ''Golden Toads'' (1919) and ''Inheritance'' (1925). Doménech collaborated with the Barcelona Institute of Social Reforms (1918) and gave speeches on the condition of women, work at home, and workers and women's professions at the Ateneu Barcelonès and other institutions such as the Agrupació Feminal and the Social Museum of Barcelona. In 1923 she attended commissions in Switzerland for the "study of institutions" aimed at the protection, moral progress and material well-being of all workers, not just women.


Member of Congress

For a month in 1930, she was a Member of the Congress in Madrid, and she was the first Assistant Inspector of Work in Spain.


Later years

In 1946 she published a collection of poems, ''Al rodar del temps,'' and a novel in Spanish, ''Confidencias.'' According to Cavallé, Maria Domènech's social activity was remarkable "due to the large number of tasks she participated in and the role that she played in the ideological search of Catalan society, mainly as regards the role of women. He goes on to say, "she regards man and woman as 'the two essential parts of the whole called humanity.' Both are of an identical nature, but each presents 'those variants which are proper to the modalities which were assigned to them in their creation.'"


Selected works


Poetry

* ''Al rodar del temps (As time rolls by) (1946)'' ''The following were contributions to the
Floral Games Floral Games were any of a series of historically related poetry contests with floral prizes. In Occitan, their original language, and Catalan they are known as '' Jocs florals'' (; modern Occitan: ''Jòcs florals'' , or ''floraus'' ). In French ...
in Barcelona:'' Arxiu Històric de la Ciutat de Barcelona. Fons 6B-Jocs Florals, Sèrie III-Pliques * ''Mireia'' (1915) * ''La santa mà'' (1916) * ''Varena'' (1917) * ''Alda i Roland'' (1920) * ''Lliberació'' (1934) * ''Pels voltans de la Seu'' (1934)


Novels

* ''Snows'' (1914) * ''Backlight'' (1917) * ''The Golden Toads'' (1919) * ''Inheritance'' (1925) * ''He ...'' (1925)


Stories

* ''Confidències (1946)''


Theater

* ''The Saint of La Mercè'' (1918) * ''To Temptas'' (1922)


Awards

* First prize in the Natural Flower category for her poem ''Mireia'' (1915) *Silver Medal of Labor (1923)


Bibliography


External links


Maria Domènech Escoté al Diccionari Biogràfic de Dones. Biografia, obres i bibliografia

CAVALLÉ I BUSQUETS, Joan. "Maria Domènech, feminista?". ''Butlletí del Centre d'Estudis Alcoverencs''. 1982 Núm. 17
{{DEFAULTSORT:Domenech, Maria 1877 births 1952 deaths Women writers from Catalonia People from Alt Camp Spanish women poets 20th-century Spanish poets Poets from Catalonia 20th-century Spanish women writers Writers from Barcelona Journalists from Catalonia Catalan-language writers Spanish feminists