- Xavier Villaurrutia
Xavier Villaurrutia y González (
27 August 1903 –31 December 1950 ) was aMexican poet andplaywright , whose most famous works are the short theatrical dramas, called "Autos profanos", compiled in the work "Poesía y teatro completos" published in 1953.Early life
Xavier Villaurrutia was born in Mexico City in 1903. He studied in the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria(
National Preparatory School ) and in the Escuela de Jurisprudencia (Jurisprudence School). During that time, he felt a certain affinity to writing so he decided to dedicate his life to writing literature.In 1928 he joined the grupo de los Contemporáneos ( Contemporaries). In 1935, he received a scholarship to study in the
Yale University where he studied Theatre. Returning to Mexico in 1937, he started working for the local newspaper "Letras de Mexico".Alongside with
Salvador Novo , they founded the magazine Ulises in 1927.Professional achievements
Professionally, Villaurrutia worked for the Mexican literary review "Contemporáneos" (literally "Contemporaries") from 1928 to 1931. Villaurrutia would later found the first
experimental theater in Mexico.Notable works
Villaurrutia's notable works include his poetic writings beginning with "Reflejos" in 1926 and "Nocturnos" in 1933. Villaurrutia's writing becomes darker in his later poetic works: "Nostalgia de la muerte" (literally meaning "thoughts of the dead") in 1938, and "Décima muerte" (literally "tenth death") in 1941. It is unclear if this change was due to the increase turmoil in Europe that would lead to
World War II or simply due to Villaurrutia's increasing age. The preoccupation with death in Villaurrutia's work would climax with his 1941 with his play "Invitación a la muerte", the title of which can be literally translated to "Invitation to the death" (see "References" below regarding Dr. Raymond Marion Watkins's book which chronicles a history and analysis of this play, which Watkins demonstrates was heavily influenced by Villaurrutia's integration of dramatic elements traceable to William Shakespeare's "Hamlet.") The final published work of Villaurrutia would come posthumously in 1953 with the publication of "Poesía y teatro completos" a collection of his works which included the short theatrical dramas, "Autos profanos".Inspiration
Xavier Villaurrutia was greatly influenced by the work of
Ramón López Velarde as well as by several other Mexican poets, in particularAlí Chumacero .Commemoration
Since 1955 there has been a
Xavier Villaurrutia Award for literary works published in Mexico, selected by a jury of writers. This award has been sponsored by theConsejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes since 1991. [ [http://www.literaturainba.com/premios/xavier_villaurrutia.htm "El Premio Xavier Villaurrutia"] - in Spanish]References
* [http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0850907.html "The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia", 6th ed.]
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* For more information on Villaurrutia's "Invitación a la Muerte," see Dr. Raymond Marion Watkins's From Elsinore to Mexico City: The Pervasiveness of Shakespeare's Hamlet in Xavier Villaurrutia's Invitación a la Muerte--published in Saarbrücken, Germany, by VDM Verlag, 2008. Dr. Watkins's book also includes extensive documentation of Villaurrutia's study at Yale University's Drama School from 1935-36, the only time Villaurrutia left his native Mexico City.
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