César Vallejo
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- In full:
- César Abraham Vallejo
- Born:
- March 16, 1892, Santiago de Chuco, Peru
- Also Known As:
- César Abraham Vallejo
- Notable Works:
- “Human Poems”
- “Los heraldos negros”
- “Trilce”
- “Tungsten”
César Vallejo (born March 16, 1892, Santiago de Chuco, Peru—died April 15, 1938, Paris, France) was a Peruvian poet who in exile became a major voice of social change in Spanish American literature.
Born the 11th child to parents who were both of mixed Spanish and Quechua Indian origins, Vallejo as a child witnessed at first hand hunger and poverty and the injustices done to the Indians of the region. He attended the University of Trujillo (1913–17), where he studied both law and literature, writing a thesis entitled El romanticismo en la poesía castellana (“Romanticism in Castilian Poetry”; published 1954).
Vallejo’s first book of poems, Los heraldos negros (1918; “The Black Heralds [or Messengers]”), showed him still under the stylistic influence of Parnassianism and Modernism in his exploration of what were to be his major themes: his loss of security when his mother and an older brother died; his resulting sense of the futility and inherent limitations of life; and the inability of human beings to achieve their potential because of social oppression and injustice.
In 1920 Vallejo’s involvement in political matters concerning Indians led to his imprisonment for nearly three months. This experience heightened his feeling of loss at the death of his mother and contributed to a state of depression that was to torment him the rest of his life. Escalas melografiadas (1922; “Musical Scales”), a collection of short stories, and many of the more complex poems of Trilce (1922; Eng. trans. Trilce) were conceived during his imprisonment. In his major work Trilce, Vallejo signaled his complete break with tradition by incorporating neologisms, colloquialisms, typographic innovations, and startling imagery, with which he sought to express the disparity that he felt existed between human aspirations and the limitations imposed on people by biological existence and social organization.
After publishing Fabula salvaje (1923; “Savage Story”), a short psychological novel about the decline of a mentally disturbed Indian, Vallejo left for Paris and never returned to his native land. Life in Paris was difficult for him; he barely made a living from translations, language tutoring, and political writing. But while he felt like an outsider because of his Indian heritage, he succeeded in establishing contacts with leading avant-garde artists. He kept in touch with Peru by publishing articles in Amauta, the journal founded by his friend José Carlos Mariátegui, founder of the Peruvian Communist Party.
Vallejo came to believe that the language of poetry should be devoid of all traditional devices in its description of the human condition, and that literature should also serve the cause of the masses. Marxism seemed to him to be the only way of rectifying the abuses and injustices he saw in society, and two visits to Russia in 1928 and 1929 served to reinforce his political commitment. He joined the Communist Party in 1931.
Vallejo was expelled from Paris in 1930 as a political militant and went to Madrid. There he wrote the proletarian novel El tungsteno (1931; Tungsten), showing the brutal exploitation and degradation of Indian workers at a Peruvian tungsten mine. He returned to Paris in 1932, and he then spent two years in Spain during that nation’s civil war (1936–39). The Spanish Civil War inspired most of his last important volume of poetry, Poemas humanos (1939; Human Poems), which presents an apocalyptic vision of an industrial society in crisis and unable to advance beyond a state of mass evil, alienation, and despair.
Most of the poems of the 1930s were published only after Vallejo’s death. His fiction is collected in Novelas y cuentos completos (1970; “Complete Novels and Stories”) and his poetry in Obra poética completa (1974; “Complete Poetical Works”). The Complete Posthumous Poetry (1978) is an English translation by Clayton Eshleman and José Rubia Barcia.