Pilar Paz Pasamar Explained

Pilar Paz Pasamar (13 February 1932 - 7 March 2019) was a Spanish poet and writer whose work has been translated into Italian, Arabic, French, English and Chinese. She was a member of the Cádiz branch of the 1950s poetic generation. She was a member of the Real Academia Hispano Americana de Cádiz since 1963. Her awards and honors include second place from the Premio Adonáis de Poesía for "Los buenos días" (1954), Adoptive Daughter of the city of Cádiz (2005), Meridiana Prize of the Andalusian Institute of Women (2005), included in the section "Own Names" of the Instituto Cervantes, and Author of the Year by the Andalusian Center of Letters of the Junta de Andalucía (2015). The city council of her hometown annually awards the Pilar Paz Pasamar Prize for short stories and poetry by women.

Early life

Pilar Paz Pasamar was born in Jerez de la Frontera, 13 February 1932.[1] Her father was Arturo Paz Varela, an infantry captain of Jerez. Her mother was Pilar Pasamar Mingote, a zaragozana who left the profession of lyrical singer when she married Arturo. Her siblings included Mercedes (b. 1927), Arturo (b. 1933) and Jorge Antonio (b. 1943).

After the Spanish Civil War, the family settled in Madrid, where the daughters were enrolled in the Carmelites school on Fortuny Street. But the family spent holidays in the south, where the Paz's poetic sensibility around three stimuli were developed: the lyric of oral tradition (very much alive in Lower Andalusia), the songs she heard on the radio, and the poems of Las mil mejores poesías that her mother taught her to recite.

Career

1940s-1956

Between 1947 and 1948, Paz wrote a "poetic corner" in the newspaper Ayer de Jerez.[2] In her first works, there are similarities to poems written by Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, Rubén Darío, Antonio Machado, and Juan Ramón Jiménez. Her poems evolved as she made literary friendships in her native Jerez with Juan Valencia and, above all, José Manuel Caballero Bonald,[3] who became her first poetic mentor in Madrid circles.

From 1950, coinciding with the inauguration of the Summer Courses for Foreigners in Cádiz, Paz joined the group that published the magazine Platero (1950-1954),[4] composed of Fernando Quiñones, Felipe Sordo Lamadrid, Serafín Pro Hesles, Francisco Pleguezuelo, and the painter Lorenzo Cherbuy. With them, she went to Córdoba in 1951 to meet the poets of the “Canticle” group: Pablo García Baena, Ricardo Molina Tenor, and Juan Bernier. Platero published collaborations of Juan Ramón Jiménez, Rafael Alberti, Pedro Salinas, Vicente Aleixandre, and Gerardo Diego. The Cadiz group included other poets from the province, such as José Manuel Caballero Bonald, Julio Mariscal, and José Luis Tejada.

In 1952, Paz enrolled in the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of Complutense University of Madrid, although she did not finish the degree. There, she studied with other literary figures such as Dámaso Alonso and Carlos Bousoño.

Between 1951 and 1956, she published three books that would make her the youngest and most celebrated poet of the moment. Mara (1951), Los buenos días (1954, second prize of the 1953 Adonais award), and Ablativo amor (1955, Youth Award).[5] [6]

Paz became integrated into the feminine poetic circles of Carmen Conde Abellán, Ángela Figuera, Gloria Fuertes, Concha Lagos. Carmen Conde included Paz in all her anthologies, and years later, she occupied a prominent place in the Italian-Spanish bilingual anthology prepared by Maria Roman Colangeli (1964). Paz's works, Del abreviado mar (1957) and Violencia inmóvil (1967) appeared in the collection "Agora" edited by Concha Lagos.

In those same years, Paz had a passion for the theater. In the Complutense University of Madrid, she related to students who were part of the TEU (Spanish University Theater), including Marcelo Arroitia, Jaime Ferrán, and José María Saussol Prieto. With them, she set up an adaptation of William Shakespeare's The Tempest (Madrid, 1954). She participated in dramatized readings, and came to consider a tour of Italy with La Celestina . Together with José María Rodríguez Méndez, she wrote El Desván, an unpublished comedy.

1957-1967

She left the university when she met Carlos Redondo Huertos. They decided to marry and settle in Cádiz. The wedding, in 1957, coincided with the publication of Paz's fourth book of poems, Del abreviado mar (1957), its title a tribute to Luis de Góngora.[7]

In the ensuing years, Paz was mainly dedicated to her family.[8] Her four children were born in Cádiz: Pilar (1958), Mercedes (1960), María Eugenia (1963) and Arturo (1967). However, she published La soledad contigo in 1960. On 12 August 1963 she made a speech at the Royal Hispanic-American Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters of Cádiz where she reflected on the role of the poet.

In 1967, she published Violencia inmóvil, the best poems by the author so far.[9] [10]

From 1982

Fifteen years passed in the midst of major changes in the world, in Spain, and in Paz's family environment. She published La torre de Babel y otros asuntos in 1982, a book written following a strong personal crisis where confrontation with personal failure and the current world converge in the Tower of Babel as a central symbol of destruction of the word. It was the reappearance of Paz, the poet.[11]

The author, until then isolated in Cádiz, slowly returned to the literary context through three movements related to postmodernism and democracy: Andalusian literature, the boom of female writing in the 1980s, and the poetry of in the tradition of José Ramón Ripoll. In the same year, 1986, Pilar reappeared with Litoral femenino, and in the anthology that José Ramón Ripoll prepared for his work, La alacena (1986).

The 1990s inaugurated a period of expansion. In 1990, Textos lapidarios, was published. Two storybooks: Historias balnearias y otras (1999) and Historias bélicas (2004) followed. She also wrote for Diario de Cádiz with the column "La Hache intercalada". Philomena (1994) and Sophía (2003) were a peak in the lyric work of the author.[12]

Later life

Her last poetic installment was Los niños interiores (2008),[13] and she published Marinera en tierra adentro in 2013.[14] Paz died in Cádiz, March 7, 2019.[15]

Selected works

Poetry

Short stories

Essays, conferences, articles

Anthologies

Theater

Discography

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. La biografía más completa hasta la fecha es la que elaboró A. S. Pérez-Bustamante Mourier para el libro catálogo Pilar Paz Pasamar: “Cantar, cantar, cantar es lo que importa...”, Sevilla, Consejería de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, Junta de Andalucía, 2015, pp. 11-89. (in Spanish)
  2. Ana Sofía Pérez-Bustamante Mourier, “Los borradores silvestres de Pilar Paz Pasamar (1947-1948)”, en Estudios de teoría literaria como experiencia vital. Homenaje al Prof. José Antonio Hernández Guerrero, Cádiz, Universidad de Cádiz, 2008, pp. 279-294. (in Spanish)
  3. José Manuel Caballero Bonald, “Una poesía que se llama verdad”, Diario Ayer, Jerez de la Fra., septiembre de 1950. Cf. también “Pequeño prólogo a la poesía de Pilar Paz Pasamar”, La Tertulia literaria hispanoamericana (Madrid, Asociación Cultural Iberoamericana), nº 1, diciembre de 1952, pp. 28-29. (in Spanish)
  4. Manuel Ramos Ortega, “Platero, una revista gaditana del medio siglo”, prólogo a la edición facsímil de Platero. Revista literaria gaditana (1950-1954), 2 vols., Sevilla, Fundación El Monte, 2000, vol. I, pp. 7-30. (in Spanish)
  5. Juan Ramón Jiménez, Cartas. Antología, Ed. Francisco Garfias, Madrid, Espasa Calpe, 1992. (in Spanish)
  6. Ricardo Gullón, Conversaciones con Juan Ramón Jiménez, Madrid, Taurus, 1958, pp. 116, 151. (in Spanish)
  7. Rafael Laffón, “La soledad contigo, por Pilar Paz Pasamar”, ABC (Ed. de Andalucía), 9 de mayo de 1961, pág. 39. Melchor Fernández Almagro, “Poesía de Pilar Paz Pasamar”, La Vanguardia Española, 1 de octubre de 1959, p. 34. (in Spanish)
  8. News: Hija predilecta de Jerez . 17 December 2019 . lavozdelsur.es . 16 July 2017 . es.
  9. Gerardo Diego, reseña de “Violencia inmóvil” (Panorama Poético Español, 29 de noviembre, 1967), Obras completas. Tomo VIII. Prosa literaria (vol. 3), Ed. José Luis Bernal, Madrid, Alfaguara, 2000, págs. 926-928.
  10. [Guillermo Díaz-Plaja]
  11. Manuel Ríos Ruiz, "Una feliz reaparición poética" (reseña de La torre de Babel), Nueva Estafeta (6ª época de La Estafeta Literaria) (Madrid), nº 45-46, septiembre de 1982, pp. 100-101. (in Spanish)
  12. Manuel Gregorio González, “Pilar Paz Pasamar”, Mercurio, marzo de 2004, p. 38. (in Spanish)
  13. News: La poeta jerezana Pilar Paz Pasamar muere en Cádiz a los 86 años . 17 December 2019 . Diario de Cádiz . 8 March 2019 . es-ES.
  14. News: Pilar Paz Pasamar reúne en un solo volumen sus once libros de poesía . 17 December 2019 . Diario de Cádiz . 25 April 2013 . es-ES.
  15. News: La poeta jerezana Pilar Paz Pasamar muere en Cádiz a los 86 años . 17 December 2019 . Diario de Cádiz . 8 March 2019 . es-ES.