
Also known as Maria Zambrano, María Zambrano de Rodríguez
Spanish philosopher (1904–1991)
Top works
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María Zambrano Alarcón (April 22, 1904 – February 6, 1991) was a Spanish philosopher, intellectual, and essayist. Her extensive work between poetic reflection and civic engagement was not recognized in Spain until the last quarter of the 20th century, after a nearly 45-year-long exile. In 1988, Zambrano became the first woman to receive the Premio Cervantes, the highest literary honor in the Spanish-speaking world. She is increasingly regarded as one of the most important voices of the 20th century, and Spanish scholarship often places her alongside thinkers such as Simone Weil and Hannah Arendt, as well as her close friend and contemporary Rosa Chacel.
Zambrano's works engage with a broad range of topics, including philosophy, poetry, democratic theory, liberalism, humanism, and education . She also returned repeatedly to the figure of Antigone, exile, memory, time, religion, nature, artistic imagination, and dreams. Her writing style is distinctive, characterized by symbolism, metaphor, and an idiosyncratic, spiral-like structure. She is best known for developing a unique concept of “poetic reason” : an attempt to transcend the limiting coordinates of Enlightenment rationality by reintegrating dimensions of human experience marginalized by modernity — poetry, imagination, emotion, intuition, interiority, and dreams — into a richer, more expansive conception of reason. Zambrano's legacy is reflected in the many journals, seminars, professorships, libraries, scholarly prizes, schools, streets, and monuments that bear her name across Spain, Europe and Latin America, as well as in the María Zambrano Foundation, a research institute and cultural center in Spain which contains her complete archive and library.
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Most cited works
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5 total works indexed
· 2018 · cited 9,374x
· 2017 · cited 5,477x
· 2015 · cited 5,015x
· 2018 · cited 4,736x
· 2013 · cited 4,592x
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