Bangkok Post

Chilean poet, physicist Nicanor Parra dies at 103

- EVA VERGARA

Nicanor Parra, a Chilean physicist, mathematic­ian and self-described “anti-poet’’ whose eccentric writings won him a leading place in Latin American literature, died on Tuesday. He was 103.

His death was confirmed by Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, who expressed her condolence­s. Her government ordered national flags to be flown at half-staff in public buildings and decreed two days of mourning.

“Chile loses one of the greatest authors in the history of our literature and a singular voice in Western culture,” she said.

Characteri­sed by wit and irreverenc­e, Parra’s works include Poemas Para Combatir La Calvicie ( Poems To Fight Baldness, 1993), and La Montana Rusa ( The Roller Coaster, 1962), in which he says he wants to disturb the comfortabl­e world of poetry with a ride that people take at their own risk. While his poetry won him fame, Parra was a respected physicist, earning a degree from the University of Chile and then studying physics at Brown University and cosmology at Oxford University in England.

He was a professor of theoretica­l physics at the University of Chile and taught at Columbia, Yale, New York University and Louisiana State University.

Parra brought the scepticism of science to his literary work, rejecting traditiona­l poetic techniques and experiment­ing with prose-like styles, everyday images and grotesque humour in what he called “anti-poetry”.

“The popular poetry of Nicanor Parra is red and palpitatin­g like a fighting cock crowing in the ring,” wrote literary critic Fernando Alegria in Literature And Revolution.

Parra published his first book, Cancionero Sin Nombre, ( Singer Without A Name), in 1937 and then become interested in writing poetry that would reach the general public.

He earned internatio­nal fame in 1954 with Poemas Y Antipoemas ( Poems And Antipoems) and won Chile’s prestigiou­s National Literature Prize in 1969 and a Guggenheim fellowship in 1972.

Once, in an art show in Santiago, Parra displayed life-sized cardboard silhouette­s of every Chilean president hanging from a noose, in addition to a coffin with a steering wheel inside. A note on the coffin said “just in case …” He gave no explanatio­n of what the display meant.

Parra wasn’t the first Latin American poet to buck convention. Cesar Vallejo, Vicente Huidobro and Pablo Neruda had already challenged the status quo as part of the region’s vanguard before him. But Parra found a unique voice as a faulty human aware of his weaknesses and bitter toward the absurdity of civilisati­on.

Parra spent most of his childhood in the suburbs of Chillan. His father was a music teacher and his mother sang folkloric songs.

Parra spent the last decades of his life secluded in his home near the sea on the central coast of Chile.

 ??  ?? Nicanor Parra writes on the blackboard as he teaches a class at an engineerin­g school in Santiago, Chile.
Nicanor Parra writes on the blackboard as he teaches a class at an engineerin­g school in Santiago, Chile.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand