Maria Teresa Mascarenhas Horta (1937-05-20) 20 May 1937 (age 87) Lisbon, Portugal
Alma mater
University of Lisbon
Spouse
Luís de Barros (d. 2019)
Maria Teresa de Mascarenhas Horta Barros[1] (born 20 May 1937, Lisbon) is a Portuguese feminist poet, journalist and activist.[2] She is one of the authors of the book Novas Cartas Portuguesas (New Portuguese Letters), together with Maria Isabel Barreno and Maria Velho da Costa. The authors, known as the "Three Marias," were arrested, jailed and prosecuted under Portuguese censorship laws in 1972, during the last years of the Estado Novo dictatorship.[3] The book and their trial inspired protests in Portugal and attracted international attention from European and American women's liberation groups in the years leading up to the Carnation Revolution.[4]
The Three Marias (her and Maria Isabel Barreno and Maria Velho da Costa) are among the 50 Portuguese authors selected by António M. Feijó, João R. Figueiredo and Miguel Tamen, professors and essayists from the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon, to appear in the book O Cânone published by Tinta da China in 2020.[6]
The Portuguese Ministry of Culture awarded her with the Medal of Cultural Merit in 2020.[7]
In 2021 she was awarded the Casino da Póvoa Literary Prize 2021, at the Correntes d'Escritas literature festival, for her work Estranhezas.[8][9] In the same year, she was honored at the International Literary Festival of the Interior, created in honor of the victims of the 2017 fires.[10]
On 21 April 2022, she was awarded the degree of Grand Officer of the Order of Liberty.[11]
She was married to Luís Barros, until his death in 20 November 2019. Her son, Luís Jorge Horta Barros, born on 4 April 1965, is married to Maria Antónia Martins Peças Pereira and has two sons, Bé and Tiago Horta Barros.
Awards
In December 2024, Maria Teresa Horta was included on the BBC's 100 Women list.[12]
^"Biografia". 3 March 2016. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
^Patrick, Oona; Ellis, Dean (15 April 2014). "Maria Teresa Horta: The Third Maria". Guernica. Translated by Dean Ellis; Jose Fernandes. Retrieved 18 July 2019.