Hilda Montaire

Hilda Suico Montayre (born April 13, 1922) is a Filipino writer who often uses the pseudonym Rosa Montes.[1] She considers fellow Cebuana writer Maria Kabigon to be a major influence.

Born in Mandaue, Cebu City, Montayre studied at the Colegio de la Immaculada Concepcion in Cebu City, where she edited Blue and White, the CIC school paper, Far Eastern University and the University of Santo Tomas, Manila.

Montaire began writing at an early age. Her career took off after World War II when her short stories and serialized novels were published in Bisaya magazine. Montayre and Austregelina Espina-Moore were the only Cebuano female novelists during that time period.[2] Her novel Ikaduhang Sugo[3] was published by E. Q. Cornejo and Sons in 1971. Among her Cebuano novels are Villa Rosario Conde (1967), Miraflor (1969)[4] and Ikaduhang Sugo (1972)[5]

Montaire worked at numerous radio stations and was at one time the host of “Ang Mga Tambag ni Inday Loling,” an advice program.

References

  1. "UP Press launches new titles for 2009". University of the Philippines. 22 November 2009. Archived from the original on 30 November 2010. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  2. Sabanpan-Yu, Hope (2009). Women's Common Destiny: Maternal Representations in the Serialized Cebuano Fiction of Hilda Montaire and Austregelina Espina-Moore. UP Press. p. 24. ISBN 9789715426114. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  3. Kintanar-Alburo, Erlinda. "Nascent Feminism in Sugbuanon Literature". University of the Philippines (U.P.) Diliman Journals Online. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  4. Sabanpan-Yu, Hope (2010). "The "Ina-Ina" in Three Cebuano Novels by Hilda Montaire". Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society. 38 (4): 346–373. JSTOR 41940832.
  5. Review of Women's Studies. University of the Philippines. 1992. p. 95. Retrieved 5 September 2017.


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