Background
Matos-Cintrón was born on November 19, 1949, in Santurce, Puerto Rico.
Matos-Cintrón was born on November 19, 1949, in Santurce, Puerto Rico.
Syracuse University.
She has published several books of poetry and parts of a novel. She has openly thematized her lesbianism in much of her work. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Humanities from the University of Puerto Rico and later her Master’s of Science from the South. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University.
During the 1980s, Matos-Cintrón taught television production courses at the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón in Puerto Rico.
She also worked as television producer for the all news Channel 24. At the same time she collaborated as scriptwriter for the miniseries Color de Piel, dealing with racial tensions in Puerto Rican contemporary society.
Her television writing led her to the creation and scripting of Insólito, a dramatic anthology series dealing with supernatural phenomena in the Caribbean. In the 90"s, she returned to academia, as Lecturer at City University of New New York
Her passion for Puerto Rican and Latino Studies, and Multimedia Technology culminated with the research, production and publication of the multimedia Civil Defense-ROM Puerto Ricans in the United States of America: A Hundred Years.
In 2001, she moved to Orlando, Florida where she works as an Instructional Designer. She has completed her doctoral dissertation on mobile learning.She is known in folkloric terms as Nemir Matos Citroen. In 1981, Matos-Cintrón published her first two poetry books: Las mujeres no hablan así (San Juan, Puerto Rico: Atabex, 1981) and A través del aire y del fuego pero no del cristal (San Juan, Puerto Rico: Atabex, 1981).
Las mujeres no hablan así is the first openly lesbian poetry collection in Puerto Rican literature.
A fragment of her first novel El amordio de Amanda dealing with growing up in the 60"s in urban Puerto Rico, was included in the LGBT Puerto Rican literary anthology Los Otros Cuerpos (San Juan, Puerto Rico: Tiempo Nuevo, 2007). "El arte de morir" published in 2014, is an homage to friends who died from Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Aliens in New York City deals with the subject of migration (2012, Atabex).