Braulio Arenas
(Braulio Arenas Carvajal; La Serena, 1913-Santiago, 1988) Chilean poet.He was the promoter of surrealism in Chile through the magazines Mandragora (1938-1941) and Leitmotiv (1942-1943).He is the author of the poetry books El mundo y su doble (1941) and Discurso del Gran Poder (1952) and the novels Cerro caracol (1961 ), Perth Castle (1969) and The slaves of their passions (1975).
Braulio Arenas
The poetry of Braulio Arenas is one of the most representative of Chilean surrealism.After leaving his law studies unfinished, he entered the then effervescent Chilean literary world (in which Pablo Neruda and Gabriela Mistral already excelled) and met Vicente Huidobro, founder of creationism, in 1935.Together with Teófilo Cid, Gonzalo Rojas and Enrique Gómez Correa, among others, he founded the Mandragora group and the magazine of the same name (1938-1941), although he later disassociated himself from it to found another publication, Leitmotiv (1942-1943).
Noted introducer of the surrealist movement in the country, his poetic production is as extensive as it is excellent, and among his books of poems, The mnemonic woman (1941), The world and its double (1941), In no man's ocean (1952), The great life (1952), Speech of the Great Power (1952), The ghost house (1962), Little meditation at sunset in a cemetery by the sea (1966), In the best of the worlds (1970) and An absolutely mirror mansion wanders sleeplessly through an absolutely image mansion (1978).
Although his literary fame is due to his poetic work, he also wrote novels: Cerro Caracol (1961), Adiós a la familia ( 1961), La demoniada de Santiago (1969), El castillo de Perth (1969), El laberinto de Greta (Municipal Award of Santiago de Literature, 1972), Berenice: the fixed idea (1975) and The slaves of their passions (1975).In 1984 his career was recognized with the National Prize for Literature.
Comments
Post a Comment