Zuenir Ventura

Zuenir Ventura

Zuenir Ventura, 2012
7th Academic of the 32nd chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters
Assumed office
6 March 2015
Preceded by Ariano Suassuna
Personal details
Born Zuenir Carlos Ventura
(1931-06-01) June 1, 1931
Além Paraíba, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Nationality Brazilian

Zuenir Carlos Ventura (born June 1, 1931 in Além Paraíba, Minas Gerais) is a Brazilian journalist and writer. He is a columnist for the newspaper O Globo, and for Época magazine. He won the Jabuti Prize in 1995 in the "reportage" category for the book Cidade Partida.[1] In 2009, his book 1968 - O que Fizemos de Nós won the third place at the same category of the prize.[2] In 1989, he and his team of journalists from Jornal do Brasil won the Esso Journalism Award for their reportage on Chico Mendes' murder investigation.[3]

Zuenir was born in Minas Gerais and moved to Rio de Janeiro during his youth.[4] He had to work in order to pay his superior studies.[4] His first job was as a wall painter apprentice, with his father. He was also a janitor at a bar and a Dentures laboratory; an office-boy at a bank agency, a clerk in a shirt store, and an elementary school teacher.[4] From this latter experience he created his will to study languages.[4] He graduated as a teacher and taught for more than forty years at the Communication School of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and at the Superior School of Design of the Rio de Janeiro State University.[4]

His first job related to journalism was as an archivist at Tribuna da Imprensa, when he was still at university. However, he would only become a journalist when Carlos Lacerda (then manager-owner of the newspaper) asked to his employees if anyone would be able to write something about Albert Camus, who had recently died at the time. Zuenir offered himself and started his journalistic career.[4]

Bibliography

References

  1. Edições Anteriores - Prêmio 1995
  2. Resultado - Reportagem
  3. 1989 Esso Award
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ventura, Zuenir (2008). 1968 - O Ano Que Não Terminou (in Portuguese) (3 ed.). São Paulo: Editora Planeta. p. 285. ISBN 978-85-7665-361-5.


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