Hernán Valdés
Hernán Valdés | |
---|---|
Born | 1934 |
Died | February 15, 2023 Kassel, Germany | (aged 88–89)
Occupation | Writer |
Awards |
|
Hernán Valdés (1934 – February 15, 2023[1]) was a Chilean writer, best known for his book Tejas Verdes , the first published account of the repression carried out by the military dictatorship led by General Augusto Pinochet.
Biography
[edit]As a writer, Valdés began publishing poetry – his first book appeared in 1954 – but he then moved on to prose. His first novel, Cuerpo creciente, saw the light in 1966, and won the Santiago Municipal Literature Award the following year.[2]
Valdés studied film in Prague in the 1960s. He lived a couple of years in Paris, and in 1970 he returned to Chile by sea. Pablo Neruda was also traveling on the ship and Valdés brought the originals of his second novel: Zoom.[3] He left in 1971, under the Popular Unity government, and it would be the last work he published in Chile before departing for exile.
On 12 February 1974, after Pinochet's coup d'état, armed civilian agents entered Valdés's apartment in Santiago in search of Miguel Enríquez, leader of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR). Although they were mistaken – Valdés declared that he did not know anyone from the MIR – he was arrested and admitted the following day to the prison camp of Tejas Verdes (Llolleo), where he was tortured.[4]
Valdés spent a month in Tejas Verdes, and when he was released, he sought asylum at the Swedish embassy. In May of that year he arrived in Barcelona, and a few days later began to write what would become Tejas Verdes: Journal of a Concentration Camp in Chile, "the best story that exists about the pain of a subject put through military humiliation in the first months of the dictatorship."[5]
After his testimonial book – published the same year in Spain, but only be published in Chile 22 years later, in 1996 – Valdés returned to fiction and wrote other novels. A partir del fin, focused on the military coup of 1973, came out in Mexico in 1981 (in Chile, also 22 years later).[6] La historia subyacente, published in German in 1984, appeared in Spanish, in Chile, in 2007.[7]
On A partir del fin, María Teresa Cárdenas (El Mercurio) has said that "if there is any literary justice, it should be recognized as the great novel about the military coup."[3]
Hernán Valdés was based in Kassel, Germany, after having lived for a long time in Spain and England.[8]
See also
[edit]Awards
[edit]- Santiago Municipal Literature Award for Cuerpo creciente (1967)[2]
- Altazor Award, Essay category for Fantasmas literarios (2006)[8]
Works
[edit]- Poesía de salmos, 1954
- Apariciones y Desapariciones, poetry, 1964
- Cuerpo creciente, novel, 1966
- Zoom, novel, 1971
- A partir del fin, novel, Era, Mexico, 1981 (LOM, Santiago, 2004)
- Tejas Verdes: Journal of a Concentration Camp in Chile , testimonial, Ariel, Barcelona, 1974 (LOM, Santiago, 1996; Taurus Chile, 2012)
- La historia subyacente, novel, published in German in 1984; in Spanish, put out in a revised edition by Valdés, LOM, Santiago, 2007
- Fantasmas literarios, essay, Aguilar, Santiago, 2005; new addition, expanded and revised: Taurus, 2018
- Tango en el desierto, novel, Alfaguara, Santiago, 2011
References
[edit]- ^ "Fallece escritor chileno que describi campo de concentracin de Tejas Verdes" (in Spanish). www.elmostrador.cl. Retrieved 2024-04-22.
- ^ a b Nómez, Naín (2006). Antología crítica de la poesía chilena: Modernidad, marginalidad y fragmentación urbana (1953–1973) [Critical Anthology of Chilean Poetry: Modernity, Marginalitty, and Urban Fragmentation (1953–1973)] (in Spanish). LOM Ediciones. p. 545. ISBN 9789567369843. Retrieved 24 April 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b Cárdenas, María Teresa (5 February 2005). "La comisión debe reparar sus omisiones" [The Commission Must Repair its Omissions]. El Mercurio (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- ^ García, Javier (22 July 2012). "Hernán Valdés: 'Los escritores en Chile son cursis y les falta humor'" [Hernán Valdés: 'Writers in Chile are Corny and Lack Humor']. La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- ^ Cuadros, Ricardo (8 June 2005). "Ficción y Referente Histórico. La narrativa de Hernán Valdés" [Fiction and Historical Reference. The Narrative of Hernán Valdés.]. Crítica.cl (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- ^ Careaga Catenacci, Roberto (15 March 2004). "A partir del Fin: una reflexión perpleja del Golpe" [A partir del Fin: A Perplexed Reflection on the Coup]. El Mostrador (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 16 August 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- ^ Promis, José (22 July 2007). "Publican novela alemana de Hernán Valdés" [German Novel of Hernán Valdés Published]. El Mercurio (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- ^ a b "Hernán Valdés" (in Spanish). Altazor Award. Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- 1934 births
- 1970s missing person cases
- 20th-century Chilean male writers
- 20th-century Chilean poets
- Chilean essayists
- Chilean exiles
- Chilean expatriates in Germany
- Chilean male poets
- 20th-century Chilean novelists
- Chilean torture victims
- Enforced disappearances in Chile
- Formerly missing people
- German-language writers
- 2023 deaths
- Missing person cases in Chile
- Chilean male novelists
- 21st-century Chilean novelists
- 21st-century Chilean poets
- 21st-century Chilean male writers