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Dámaso Alonso

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Name
  
Damaso Alonso

Role
  
Poet

Awards
  
Miguel de Cervantes Prize


Damaso Alonso Ricardo Clemente diario Dmaso Alonso

Died
  
January 25, 1990, Madrid, Spain

Books
  
Hijos de la ira, Poemas Puros: Poemillas de La Ciudad - Scholar\'s Choice Edition

Similar People
  
Vicente Aleixandre, Jorge Guillen, Gerardo Diego, Pedro Salinas, Luis Cernuda

Insomnio d maso alonso


Dámaso Alonso y Fernández de las Redondas (22 October 1898 – 25 January 1990) was a Spanish poet, philologist and literary critic. Though a member of the Generation of '27, his best-known work dates from the 1940s onwards.

Contents

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Dámaso Alonso Biografía


Early life and education

Dámaso Alonso Damaso Alonso Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Born in Madrid in 1898, Alonso studied Law, Philosophy and Literature before undertaking research at Madrid's Centro de Estudios Históricos. An enthusiastic participant in the cultural and literary life at the famous Residencia de estudiantes (which at this time counted among its residents Federico García Lorca, Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí, amongst others), Alonso also wrote for the literary magazines Revista de Occidente ('Western Review') and Los Cuatro Vientos ('The Four Winds').

Academic career

Dámaso Alonso Biografia de Dmaso Alonso

Alonso was to become an academic of great renown: he taught Spanish language and literature at several foreign universities, including the University of Oxford and took up a Chair at the University of Valencia between 1933 and 1939 before moving to the University of Madrid. He was elected to the Real Academia Española in 1945 and served as its Director between 1968 and 1982, when he was named Director Emeritus.

Literary career

Dámaso Alonso MONSTERS

Alonso's literary career can essentially be split into two convenient blocks. As a poet his early work (such as 1921's Poemas puros; Poemillas de la ciudad and 1925's El viento y el verso) is widely considered inferior to that of his fellow poets in the Generation of '27, and he himself acknowledged his limitations by referring to himself as a 'poeta de rachas' or 'part-time poet'. His mature work, however, particularly Hijos de la ira ('Children of Wrath', 1944, 2nd ed. 1946), is recognised as fundamental in the literature of the post-Civil War years.

Alonso's later poetry is also full of agnostic anguish—of a man in search of god, yet fearful of the implications were this God not to exist.

As a literary critic Alonso's impact was substantial; in particular he is credited with revolutionizing the study of Spanish Baroque poetry, particularly the work of Góngora, and his critical work was praised for its intellectual rigour. Highlights include Poesía de San Juan de la Cruz (1942), Poesía española: Ensayo de métodos y límites estilísticos (1950) and Estudios y ensayos gongorinos (1955).

Awards

In 1978 Alonso was awarded the Premio Cervantes, the Spanish literary world's highest honour.

References

Dámaso Alonso Wikipedia