Teresa Porzecanski (born 1945) is a Uruguayan anthropologist and writer.
From an Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish family (her father was originally from Libau and her mother from Syria), her works have included a focus on the Jewish communities of Uruguay, afrodescendent minorities, prejudice and ethnic issues.
From 1978-1981, she collected oral histories of Jewish immigrants which was published as Life Stories of Jewish Immigrants to Uruguay in its first edition in Spanish in 1986.
In a review for the American Jewish Archives, Alejandro Lilienthal called it a good introduction to the subject,outside of the transcriptions of the oral histories.Her fiction is part of a tradition of works exploring identities and migration maladjustments, prejudice against minorities, and women interior worlds.In 1992, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship, during which she studied the Sephardim and rabbinic lore.
She has also received a Fulbright scholarship.
as well as a Rockefeller Residency Grant in Bellagio, Italy, to write her fiction.