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Miguel Otero Silva - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Miguel Otero Silva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cover of the book about the life of Miguel Otero Silva, made by Argenis Martínez, published in 2006
Cover of the book about the life of Miguel Otero Silva, made by Argenis Martínez, published in 2006

Miguel Otero Silva (October 26, 1908 - August 28, 1985), was a Venezuelan writer, journalist, humorist and politician. Remaining a figure of great reference in Venezuelan literature, his literary and journalistic works were strictly related to the social and political history of Venezuela.

Contents

[edit] Life

Born in Barcelona, Anzoátegui State, moved to Caracas at very young age, to study in the Liceo Caracas. He applied to the Universidad Central de Venezuela for studies in civil engineering. During this time, takes place his early literary activity, writing for magazines and newspapers, such as Élite and Fantoches, and other university publications, besides incursing in journalism. During the Student’s Week of the year 1928, Otero Silva formed part of a series of protests against the rule of then-president Juan Vicente Gómez (see Generation of 1928); in addition to this, he also became involved in a military plot to overthrow the government. Due to this, Otero Silva was forced to get into exile, in Curaçao. There, along with Gustavo Machado, Rafael Urbina López and other Venezuelan expatriates, began preparing an invasion of the mainland across Falcón State, an operation that was unsuccessfully carried out in June 1929. During this time, Otero Silva worked on his first novel, Fiebre (Fever), later published in 1939.

By 1930 he had become affiliated to the Comintern, having plenty of interest for Marxist thinking. He was able to return to Venezuela at the death of Gómez in 1935. Taking advantage of the freedom of speech allowed by Gómez’s successor in office, Eleazar López Contreras, Otero Silva began writing humorous poetry in newspapers, with certain political content. Tagged soon as a communist, the government expelled him once again from the country in 1937. In these years, he went on traveling through Mexico, United States and Colombia. Otero was permitted to return after three years of exile. Then, in 1941, he co-founded the humoristic weekly newspaper El Morrocoy Azul (The Blue Tortoise), along with Francisco José Delgado and Claudio Cedeño, besides a leftist weekly, Aquí Está (Here It Is).

With the founding of the newspaper El Nacional by Henrique Otero Vizcarrondo (his father), Otero Silva is appointed as the head of writing, coinciding with his decision for applying at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, to study journalism. In 1946, he married María Teresa Castillo, a fellow journalist, and graduated from university in 1949. Two years later, Otero left the Communist Party of Venezuela, claiming that he wasn't ready for political discipline, and to dedicate himself to writing. He spent a year in Guárico, investigating the history of the village of Ortiz, since its growth to its abandonment due to a malaria breakout. The city served as inspiration for his next novel, Casas Muertas, which was published in 1955. The novel was awarded with the Premio Nacional de Literatura, and the Premio de Novela Arístides Rojas that same year.

His newspaper, El Nacional, was suspended twice during the military rule of Marcos Pérez Jiménez. Towards the end of the dictatorship, he was arrested for editing and publishing the Manifiesto de los Intelectuales (Intellectuals Manifesto), a text attacking the Pérez Jiménez administration. When it was overthrown in 1958, Otero is awarded with the National Prize of Journalism, and also elected as senator for the Congress, representing Aragua. However, the newspaper was again object of much pressure by the new government of Rómulo Betancourt, for the leftist ideas of Otero and its suspected support of communism. The discontent of the government was the cause for Otero to resign from the newspaper's body of writing.

His works from the period include Oficina N° 1, in 1961, and La Muerte de Honorio in 1963, along with Las Celestiales in 1965, a book of couplets with humouristic references to politics, ideologies, and religion, which he signed as "Iñaki de Errandonea", a fictional jesuit priest invented by Otero himself.

In 1967, he was made a full member of the Academia Venezolana de la Lengua. As a senator, he promoted the creation of the Instituto Nacional de Cultura y Bellas Artes in the 1970s, and participated in the founding of the Galería de Arte Nacional. In 1979, Otero was awarded with the Lenin Peace Prize.

In 1985, soon after publishing La Piedra que era Cristo, Otero died in Caracas on August 28.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Novels

  • Fiebre (Fever, 1939)
  • Casas Muertas (Dead Houses, 1955)
  • Oficina N° 1 (Office N° 1, 1961)
  • La Muerte de Honorio (The Death of Honorio, 1963)
  • Cuando quiero llorar, no lloro (When I want to cry, I don't, 1970)
  • Lope de Aguirre, Príncipe de la Libertad (Lope de Aguirre, Prince of Freedom, 1979)
  • La Piedra que era Cristo (The Stone that was Christ, 1985)

[edit] Poetry

  • Agua y Cauce (Water and Ditch, 1937)
  • 25 poemas (25 poems, 1942)
  • Elegía coral a Andrés Eloy Blanco (Coral Elegy to Andrés Eloy Blanco, 1958)
  • La Mar que es el Morir (1965)
  • Las Celestiales (The Celestials, 1965)
  • Umbral (1966)

[edit] Trivia

  • It should be noted that in the first five novels by Otero, the number of words compreending the title are the same as the number of order in which they are published. Id est, Fiebre, the first novel by Otero, has only one word; the second, Casas Muertas, has two; and so until Cuando quiero llorar, no lloro, the fifth novel with a five-word title. After this, the patron does not follow anymore. This may seem as an intentional detail by Otero.
  • In 2006 Argenis Martínez made a biographical book about the life of Miguel Otero Silva, for the Biblioteca Biográfica Venezolana, with the seal of El Nacional, (the cover of this book is the principal photo of this article).

[edit] External links


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