Dimalanta served as the
Writer in Residence and a
Full Professor of
Literature and
Creative Writing at the UST Graduate School and at the Faculty of Arts and Letters until her untimely passing. During her academic career, she held various administrative posts, including the position of Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Letters and Director of the Center for Creative Writing and Studies. A panelist for various writing workshops at UST,
University of the Philippines,
Silliman University in
Dumaguete, and Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology in
Iligan, Dimalanta served as a judge in prominent literary award-giving bodies such as the
National Book Awards by the Manila Critics' Circle, Philippines Free Press Literary Awards, and Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature. This status, alongside her teaching experience, enabled her to reach and influence generations of journalists and creative writers like Recah Trinidad, Arnold Azurin,
Cirilo Bautista, Albert B. Casuga,
Cristina Pantoja-Hidalgo, Eric Gamalinda, Jose Neil Garcia, Mike Coroza, and Lourd de Veyra. Dimalanta published several books in her lifetime: seven books on poetry, one on drama, one on criticism, and one on her collected prose. Her first collection of poems,
Montage, won the
Iowa State University Best Poetry Award (1969), and first prize (poetry category) in the
Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature (1974). She was a founding member and served as chairman of the Manila Critics Circle and an honorary fellow of the Philippine Literary Arts Council. Poet and critic Cirilo F. Bautista hailed her as "not only our foremost woman poet but also one of the best poets writing now, regardless of gender." Dimalanta also wrote critical reviews in international journals and local periodicals and taught at
Colegio de San Juan de Letran and
De La Salle University. The
Ateneo de Manila University honored Dimalanta with the 13th Paz Marquez-Benitez Memorial Lecture and Exhibit which was organized by the Ateneo Library of Women’s Writings (Aliww). In 2002, UST published Dimalanta's verse drama, "Lorenzo Ruiz, Escribano: A Play in Two Acts," with a Filipino translation by Florentino H. Hornedo and Michael M. Coroza. It was premiered on 22–24 February 1994 at UST in a production directed by
Isagani R. Cruz. Aside from her career in Literature, Dimalanta is also known to have founded in 1995 the UST Faculty of Arts and Letters' official choir, the UST Chorus of Arts and Letters, (or the AB Chorale) with Mr. Paulo Zarate as its first musical director. She also penned the lyrics of the Hymn of the said Faculty. Dimalanta lived with her family until her death in
Navotas. == her works ==