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Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert

https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

My mother is Lucia Fox Lockert. My mother was born Lucia Ungaro on March 29, 1928. My mother
was born in Lima, Peru. My mother came from an upper middle class family with high educational
standards.

My grandfather on my mothers side was Fabricio Ungaro and Malpartida. Malpartida was his
mothers last name. My grandfather was born in 1903. My grandfather was one of the founders of the
American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA) party in his twenties but later he left the party. He
received his Engineering degree in the National University of Engineering in 1926. My grandfathers
field was Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Depression hit Peru and he got a job with a private
company. He had a brother named Mario Alfonso who was born in 1905. He got a job with a
petroleum company in the Northern oil fields of Peru. My grandfather knew English and became and
oil expert. On his return to Lima he taught at the engineering school in the new field of oil
engineering. During his last years of work he worked as a supervisor in the Ministry of Public works.
My grandfather became a Free Mason, a well kept secret. My grandfather died in 1956 due to a case
of peritonitis.

My grandmother on my mothers side was Enriqueta Zevallos and Rodriguez Parra. Her mother was
the principal of an elementary school. My grandmother died in 1967. My mother had two brothers.
Her older brother Mario Aurelio Ungaro was born in 1927 and received his doctor of medicine (MD)
from the Facultad de Medicina Humana San Fernandoin 1954 and did his residence at Buffalo
Hospital. He was a pathologist in Trujillo. Her younger brother Manuel Ungaro Zeballos was an
architect. Manuel organized La Carta de Machu Pichu in 1977. In attendance were Le Corbusier,
Frank Lloyd Wright, Ludwig Mies Van der Roe, Walter Gropius and Alvar Aalto. My mother was
very influenced by her great aunt Elisa on her mothers side that was a suffragette. There is a statue
of this aunt in the Parque de la Exposicin in Lima, Peru.
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

She was a valedictorian at her high school. She studied at the National University of San Marcos in
Peru. The National University of San Marcos was founded in 1551 and is the oldest university in the
Americas (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_University_of_San_Marco).

She graduated from that university with a baccalaureate in Literature in 1950. She also got another
degree in Education and Philosophy in 1952. In 1953 she got a scholarship in a national contest in
Peru and came to the United States where she got two more degrees. She received her M.A. in 1955
from Washington University. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1961 in the
field of Spanish American Literature.

My mom met my dad at the University at Illinois. My father was working on his doctorate, as well, in
American Thought and Language. She married Hugh B. Fox Jr., my father, in June 1956 and
changed her name to Lucia Fox. They lived in Los Angeles, California from 1957 until 1968. In 1968,
they both went to teach at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. She remained there
until 1999 when she was nominated Emeritus Professor

During the first years of their marriage, they had a very creative, symbiotic relationship. First, they
went to Mexico for a year in 1960. Afterwards they went to Peru in 1961. My mom had three children
in four years, between 1957 and 1960. My parents were strict Catholics. They went to Europe in 1963
for a summer with their children. We visited England, France, Spain and Germany. I was six years
old at the time and this was my first trip abroad.

Afterwards they went to Venezuela for two years from the years 1964-66. My mother enrolled me in
Venezuelan schools instead of international schools and I learned Spanish via the sink or swim
method. Being fluent in Spanish has helped me immensely and I am grateful to my mother for
making this move. My mom was offered a lectureship in the Centro Venezolano Americano and
wrote for the literary magazines in Caracas, where her books appeared, Ensayos hispanoamericanos
(1965) and Imagenes de Caracas (1965). Then the University of California at Northridge offered a
job to my mom which she accepted.

My dad went back to teach at Loyola University. On their return to Los Angeles, my parents formed a
group La Frontera. My mother published Tragaluz in 1967. It was the time of the Viet Nam war
and beatnik poets, they met Charles Bukowski and many other luminaries of the underground press
scene during this period. Three of my moms books were written then, but appeared two years later,
Redes (1968), Tiempo atonal (1969) and Aceleracion multiple (1969). My mother wrote the book La
nueva constelacion (1969) an anthology of underground poets. My mother was the cofounder
magazine Ghost Dance. She was also an editor of Ghost Dance in 1968.

In 1968 Michigan State University (MSU) offered my parents jobs. My mom worked in the Romance
and Classical Languages Department. My father worked in the American Thought and Language
Department. My family drove from California to Michigan. I remember this road trip vividly
especially our stop at Las Vegas. The lights of Vegas did excite my young imagination.

The family stopped for three months in Providence, Rhode Island. My parents did research in
Brown Universitys Library while they were waiting for the beginning of classes at MSU. I attended
an inner city summer school program and this was my first encounter with African Americans. My
mother discovered an important document related to Latin American independence. Also she did
research and wrote on Colonial times. She got everything published in scholarly reviews.
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

My father got a Fellowship after one year in East Lansing. My parents both took a leave of absence to
travel to Argentina in 1969. In Buenos Aires, Argentina, my mother wrote La odisea del pajaro,
published in 1972. Her book of essays entitled El rostro de la patria en la literatura peruana
appeared in Argentina in l970. My parents separated during this year in Argentina and soon
afterwards divorced. My mother found herself to be the sole provider in Argentina when my father
returned to the US prematurely. Local Argentinean wages at the time were very low. I was thirteen
at the time and was old enough to realize our financial situation was tight. My mother tutored
students and gave English lessons to make a living. My sisters and I attended Argentinean public
schools.

My mother also taught us our American lessons after school. She had gone ahead and gotten US
textbooks from our school in the US before going to Argentina and we kept up with our studies in the
American school system. We always had a reading hour after school before and after our year in
Argentina and this was a major factor in my intellectual progress. Because of this tutorial, I would
say my reading level was always two to four years ahead of most of my fellow students. I would also
say what I was reading might have been closer to five years ahead scholastically of what my fellow
students were reading. I actually read guys like Henry James while I was still in middle school! I am
not saying a person that young can really understand someone like Henry James at that age but I did
read the books one way or another. I do remember rereading Turn of the Screw in my twenties and
thinking how much I missed the first time around. I had read most of the literature required in
humanities classes in college before attending college. I have been a teacher since then and observed
many students and am now aware how rarely parents are willing to help their children with their
academics to this extent and I will always be grateful to my mother for that reading hour.

Upon her return to the States a big change took place in my moms life. She became the only
provider for her children and had to exert her ingenuity to make money since her salary alone could
barely cover the house payment. She started renting rooms to students. My father refused to pay
child support and in that period avoiding child support was relatively easy to do. My mother
demonstrated a real flair for business and soon was renting properties and making good money from
this side venture.

My mother left the Catholic Church because of her divorce in order, as she puts it, to search for her
individual liberation. She found her way by joining the feminist cause. She participated in
congresses, wrote papers, and organized women. Then she realized that there was something
lacking: a book essential to her cause. My mom then wrote Women Novelists in Spain and Spanish
America (1979). The book covers a span of four hundred years. The book is organized in three
areas: Family, Social class and Sexuality. Called the Red Book of the Hispanic Feminist Liberation,
it provides a source and a nexus in the history of Hispanic womens rebellion.

During these years my mother also wrote small editions of poetry including: Latin American in
Evolution, bilingual (1974), Mosaicos, bilingual(1974), also in a Posters edition. Monstruos
terrestres(1974), Assemblage, bilingual (1977), Constelacion (1978) Leyendas de una princesa
india, bilingual, (1979), Formas, bilingual, (1979).

The eighties marked a new immersion in her academic life. She became the first teacher of Chicano
Culture and Chicano literature at MSU. She wrote a book of interviews entitled Chicanas, Their
Voices, Their Lives (1989). This book was published by the Board of Education of Michigan. She
published dramas including Ayer es nunca jamas (1978), Sor Juana, the Tenth Muse (1978) Un
cierto lugar (1980). (Sor Juana de America, in Spanish, is different from the English version)
(1995).
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

In the eighties my mom started getting numerous awards including the The Michigan Council for
the Arts Creative Grant, 1981, The National Endowment for the Arts Grant, 1982, The Center for
Advanced Studies for International Development to do research in Feminist Centers in Peru, 1984,
Palmas Magisteriales del Gobierno del Peru, 1984, The Diane Creative Award, 1985,
International Travel Grant to Germany, 1986, Michigan Hispanic Educator of the Year,1988,
Martin Luther King, Cesar Chaves/Rosa Parks Visiting Program Grant, 1988, The Association of
Governing Boards of Michigan Award, 1990, The Rockefeller Foundation Grant to write in
Bellagio, Italy, 1991, The Poetry Award of the American Association of California, 1991, The
National Endowment for the Humanities grant for Research in Colonial Literature in New Mexico
and Mexico, 1992, The Editors Choice Award of the National Library of Poetry, 1993. Grant for
Research in the Renaissance Studies of the Newberry Library in Chicago, 1994, Writer in Residence
at Florida Atlantic University, 1997, Invitation to the Department of Researches Peruviennes et
Andines, Universidad de Pau, France, 1996. Michigan State Universitys Emeritus Professor
Award, the Poetry Award Amauta in Macchu Picchu, Peru. Diploma del Instituto Literario
Cultural Hispanico, 2000, and Symposium de Escritura Femenina e Historia en America
Latina 2004.

My mother went to Peru to study the condition of poor women in the shanty towns. Under the
guidance of the members of the Feminist Center Peru/Mujer, she was also able to do research in
other feminist centers. Her book Feminist Centers (1988) was expanded into Grass-Root Feminist
Centers in Lima, published by Women in International Development at Michigan State University,
(1993). A poetry book Lima in Chaos appeared (1990 and is a portrait of her birth place and the
changes she finds. In her drama The Risk of Living (1991), she shows the political insurgence of the
Shining Path a Socialist Movement in Peru. When my mom was a graduate student at University of
Illinois she did some work for the great sociologist Oscar Lewis, author of Sanchez Children. She
applied his sociological methods to Chicanas, Their Voices, Their Lives. Also in the drama The Risk
of Living, we feel her political awareness.

My Mother at Machu Pichu[/caption]


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Vida y Creacin, is my moms autobiography. The book appeared in 1993 in Spanish. The
autobiography also contains poems for each section. It is divided in several chapters: 1. Divorce 2.
Lover 3. Julian 4. Academy 5. Lima, birth place 6. Lucia 7. U.S.A. 8. Trips 8. My children 9. Magic 10.
The Extra-terrestrials.

Her divorce was final in 1970. Her second marriage was to Clinton Lockert in 1972. Around this
period my mother settled on the professional name of Lucia Fox Lockert. Her advice to female
writers is to stick to one name for publication purposes. My mom is a feminist pioneer in many ways
and had to learn the name game the hard way. Clint and my mom live happily in East Lansing. Her
three children are adults now. She said then that the most important thing that caused her to work as
hard as she did was to make enough money to be able to pay for their college education. She did it,
all alone. She is proud of the accomplishments of her children. I am the oldest and have two younger
sisters, Marcella and Cecilia. Marcella has two masters. I went on to get my masters and
doctorate. Cecilia is living with my mom in East Lansing and is a great help to her.

There are two stages in my moms teaching career at MSU. The first half of her thirty years she
taught Contemporary Spanish American Literature. During this time period, she met luminaries like
Jorge Luis Borges, Carlos Fuentes, and Julio Cortazar.

In the second stage of her career at MSU, she taught pre-Columbian and colonial literature. In 1992,
she participated with a group of twenty professors in a seminar in New Mexico and Mexico. Indian
Visions a poetry book published in 1996 expresses her consciousness of Indian and the Spanish
identity.
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

In 1995, my mom decided to put in three books papers she had written for conferences. Of course,
many conferences publish the papers presented at the conference. Many of the books are written in
Spanish, the translation of the titles are as follows 1. Spanish Chroniclers and Emancipators 2.
Women: Writing and Subversion and 3. Peru: Writing and Subversion. For the first book she did
some research at the Brown University Library, and in the Newberry Library in Chicago. For the
second book she includes nineteenth and twentieth century novelists: Matto de Turner,
Carbonera, Castellanos, Poniatowska, Garro, Silva, and Allende. In the third book she includes
Garcilaso de la Vega, Vallejo, Scorza, Arguedas, the evolution of the popular theatre, and Indian
Protest literature writers.

Lucia published, Semillas de los dioses, Seeds of the Gods, a novel in the year 2000. It is a saga of
several Indian characters and a Moorish woman named Zaira. It takes place in Peru in colonial
times, from the time of the discovery of America until the execution of the Inca Tupac Amaruc, the
last descendent of the Incas. It is not just a narration of adventures and travels but becomes a puzzle
of esoteric consequences. The main characters after many trials and errors discover that they are
descendents of the extraterrestrials. When the first encounter happens, extraordinary events are
mixed in the characters apparent accidents. In their search for identity, they move via magic from
one vibrational plane to the next.

Two Spanish poetry books Nova (2004) and Arcana (2008) have appeared lately. My mom
introduces a new technique to her poetry a new way of applying her cosmic vision to ordinary
themes. The metaphorical impact crosses the barriers of time. This gives her poetry a unique quality.
Pulitzer Prize winner, Ben Belitt had recognized very early in her publications my moms unique
quality in Spanish letters: it comes out like the water mark in fine paper or the grain of wood. I dont
see how it can fail to interest others, as a phenomenon itself. You have got a black sound, a
duende at your best, which I believe in totally.

My mom has received many reviews of her writing, Professor Deborah Gonzalez in the Latin
American Women Writers, an Encyclopedia (Routledge, 2008) wrote: Her work is a collage of
personal metaphysical ponderings within a context of transplanted feminism Fox is a prolific
writer, poet, a playwright, author and artist, professor and advocate. She has written poems about
legendary princesses, plays of revolution, research studies on women novelists of Spanish descent,
and memoirs praising the country of her birth, Peru. Her themes encompass historical facts, flights
of fancy, distant nostalgia, and political philosophy on gender and equality.

My mother died at the age of 87 on June 9 2015.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Works in Alphabetical Order

Aceleracin mltiple. Buenos Aires: Ediciones Losada, 1969.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Arcana. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 2008.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Assemblage. East Lansing: Superspace, 1977.

Ayer es nunca jams. Lima: Editores Salesianos, 1980.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Chicanas: Their Voices, Their Lives. Lansing: Board of Education, 1989.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Constelacin. East Lansing: Shamballa Publications, 1978.

Cronistas y emancipadores. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1996.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

El prfil desnudo. East Lansing: Shamballa Publications, 1978.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

El riesgo de vivir. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1992.

El rostro de la patria en la literatura peruana. Buenos Aires: Ediciones Continente, 1970.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Ensayos hispanoamericanos. Caracas: Garca Hermanos, 1965.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Feminist Centers in Lima, Per. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1988.

Formas-Forms. East Lansing: Shamballa Publications, 1979.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Grass-roots Feminist Organizations in Lima, Per. East Lansing: Women in International


Development - MSU, 1993.
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Imgenes de Caracas. Caracas: Garca Hermanos, 1965.

Indian Visions English. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1997.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

La odisea del pjaro. Bilbao: Empresas Editoras, 1972.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Latin America in Evolution. East Lansing: Superspace, 1974.

Leyendas de una princesa india / Legends of an Indian Princess. East Lansing: Shamballa
Publications, 1979.
Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Lima en caos. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1980.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Monstruos areos, terrestres y submarinos. East Lansing: Superspace, 1974.

Mosaicos (English edition). East Lansing: Old Marble Press, 1974.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Mosaicos (Spanish edition). East Lansing: Argonauta, 1974.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Mujeres: escritura y subversin. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1995.

Mltiples. East Lansing: Ghost Dance, 1969.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Nova. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 2004.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Per: escritura y subversin. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1995.

Preludios ntimos. Lima: Editorial Cndor, 1945.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Recuerdos. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 2008.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Redes. Barcelona: Ediciones Carabela, 1968.

Rueda dos (antologa). East Lansing: Superspace, 1990.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Rueda. East Lansing: Superspace, 1988.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Saga. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1992.

Semillas de los dioses. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 2000.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Sor Juana de Amrica. East Lansing: La Nueva Crncia, 1995.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Sor Juana, the Tenth Muse. East Lansing: Pachacamac, 1988.

The Risk of Living. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1991.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Tiempo atonal. East Lansing: Ghost Dance, 1969.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Tragaluz. Los Angeles: Ediciones la frontera, 1967.

Un cierto lugar. Lima: Editores Salesianos, 1980.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Vida y Creacin. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1993.


Biography of Lucia Fox Lockert
https://foxhugh.com/about-me/my-mothers-story/

Visiones indias. East Lansing: La Nueva Crnica, 1997.

Women Novelists in Spain and Spanish America. New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press, 1979.

I dedicate this page on my blog to my mom with all my love and admiration!

Hugh B. Fox III

Photo albums of my mom at:

http://s883.photobucket.com/albums/ac35/foxhugh/Mom/

http://s919.photobucket.com/albums/ad37/hughfox2/Mom%20Photo%20Effect/

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