Neruda and Us Adolescents of 1973 (Chilean Poetry in the Southern Provinces, 1975 - 1977)

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Abstract

The day Pablo Neruda passed away, I was at my parents' house on Quinchao Island, Chiloé, in the rural locality of Changüitad. I did not learn of his death until the following day through a brief radio news report (incidentally, radio was the only means available to us peasants to learn about world events). At 15 years old, I barely knew Neruda, only through a few poems I had read in school texts (“Poem 20”, and “Ode to the Sea” are titles that come to mind immediately). The poet had been in Chiloé, in Ancud, in 1923; but at that time, I did not know. How could I? There was not a single book by or about the poet in school or at home. Only later did I learn that Neruda's death marked the end of an entire era of “founders” and guiding figures of Chilean poetry in the 20th century (excerpt from the article).

Article Details




Sergio Mansilla
Mansilla, S. (1997). Neruda and Us Adolescents of 1973 (Chilean Poetry in the Southern Provinces, 1975 - 1977). ALPHA: Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, (13), 67-89. Retrieved from https://revistaalpha.ulagos.cl/index.php/alpha/article/view/3558

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