Jose Donoso

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José Donoso Yáñez (October 5, 1924 - December 1996) was a prominent Chilean novelist. Between 1967 and 1981, Donoso lived in Spain where he wrote some of the novels that consolidated the importance of his role as a central figure of Latin America's literary boom.

Early Life and Education

José Donoso was born in Santiago, Chile on October 4, 1924 to a family belonging to the high end of the country's bourgeoisie. His father, also José Donoso, was a doctor with a profound passion for literature and in the biographies of history's great musicians. Socially, more so than professionally, doctor Donoso was known as a brilliant man, characterized by his ample knowledge of culture, his sympathetic nature, and his passion for horse races. The author's mother belonged to a large and distinguished family who owned one of Chile's most important newspapers of the time La Nación. Among her family members, Eleodoro Yáñez was the most notorious since she was an important figure in Chile's political and cultural life.

In 1931, the year in which his brother Pablo was born, Donoso initiated his formal training in English and in the following year was enrolled in the Grange School. At that time, the Grange School was most elitist private college in Chile. Due to his unfathomable interest in literature, Donoso decided to enroll in Chile's Instituto Pedagógico de la Universidad de Chile to pursue further studies in the English language and literature. With the help of grants provided by the Doherty Foundation, Donoso was able to continue his studies at Princeton University to consolidate his knowledge of the English language. At Princeton University, Donoso studied under the instruction of Lawrence Thompson, R.P. Blackmur, Arthur Szathmary, Robert Fitzgerald, and Allen Tate. It was during his university years that Donoso discovered that his greatest passion in life was writing and that literature was to become an integral part of his lifestyle.

Themes Reflected in Works

The Creative Process

Symbolism

Existentialism

Surrealism

El Mocho - Donoso's Last Novel

El Mocho, the last novel that Donoso submitted to his editors, has its origin in a trip he made to the mining zone of Lota in Chile in the early 1980's. The creation of this novel was not consistent but carried out for several years until Donoso gave the book its conclusion in 1996 when his health did not allow him to continue his work. Among his peers there was a notion that the only thing that kept Donoso alive was the will and determination he had to finish El Mocho. As described by the editor of the novel, Marcelo Maturana, "Donoso escribe y a veces, al escribir, está preguntándose qué, cómo y por qué escribe".[1] By this, the editor was referring to how Donoso utilized the process of writing this novel to profoundly reflect on what, how and why he took up writing.

Some of the central features of El Mocho include: streams of communication, depictions of the aristocracy, social marginality, self identification and social assimilation. A very important aspect of El Mocho is the compulsive manner in which some of the protagonists seek their genealogical origins because it is an essential factor in determining their identity.

Later Years

Upon his return to Chile from Spain in 1981, Donoso directed a literary workshop that played an important role in the creation of a nueva narrativa chilena ( a new Chilean narrative).

  • Distinctions
    • Premio Nacional de Literatura en Chile (National Prize for Literature in Chile)
    • Premio de la Crítica en España (Prize of Critiques in Spain)
    • Premio Mondello en Italia (Mondello Prize in Italy)
    • Premio Roger Caillois en Francia (Roger Caillois in France)
    • Gran Cruz del Mérito Civil de 1995 (Great Cross of Civil Merit in 1995)

José Donoso died in Santiago, Chile, on December 1996.

Bibliography

Select titles of Jose Donoso's works.

See Also

  • Symbolism
  • Existentialism
  • Surrealism

Notes

  1. José Donoso, El Mocho (Chile: Punto de Lectura, 2004 ISBN 9562393216)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Adelstein, Miriam. Studies on the Works of José Donoso: An Anthology of Critical Essays. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellen Press, 1990. ISBN 0889463905
  • Castillo-Feliú, Guillermo I. The Creative Process in the Works of José Donoso. Rock Hill: Winthrop College, 1982. OCLC 9539104
  • Donoso, José. El Mocho. Chile: Punto de Lectura, 2004. ISBN 9562393216
  • Quinteros, Isis. José Donoso: Una Insurreción Contra la Realidad. Madrid: Hispanova, 1978. ISBN 8471332655
  • Sarrochi, Augusto C. El Simbolismo en la Obra de José Donoso. Chile: Editorial La Noria, 1992. OCLC 26843677

External Links

Donoso is the author of a number of remarkable stories and novels, which contirbuted greatly to the Latin American literary boom and the foundation of the literary movement knows as Magical Realism. His best known works include the novels Coronación, El lugar sin límites (Hell has no Limits) and El obsceno pájaro de la noche (The Obscene Bird of Night). His works deal with a number of themes, including sexualííity and psychology. He is also considered an innovative stylist.

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