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Cortazar's Biography

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Julio Cortzar (1914-1984)


Argentine writer, one of the great masters of the fantastic short story, who has been compared to Jorge Luis Borges. Many of Cortzar's stories follow the logic of hallucinations and obsessions. Central themes in his work are the quest for identity, the hidden reality behind the everyday lives of common people, and the existential angst. The author's debt to the French Symbolism and Surrealists has been demonstrated in a number of studies. Unlike Borges, Cortzar became a political radical who was involved in antiPeronist demonstrations and supported the Cuban revolution, Allende's Chile, and Sandinista Nicaragua.
"No one can retell the plot of a Cortzar story; each one consists of determined words in a determined order. If we try to summarize them, we realize that something precious has been lost." (Jorge Luis Borges)

Julio Cortzar was born in Brussels, Belgium, of Argentine parents abroad on business. When he was four years old, his family returned to Buenos Aires, where he grew up in a suburb. Cortzar attended the Escuela Normal de Profesores Mariano Acosta, a teachers training college. In 1935 he received a degree as a secondary-level teacher. He studied then two years at the University of Buenos Aires and taught in secondary schools in Bolvar, Chivilcoy, and Mendoza. In 1944-45 he was a professor of French literature at the University of Cuyo, Mendoza. He joined there a protest against Peron and was briefly imprisoned. After his release he left his post at the university. From 1946 to 1948 he was a director of a publishing company in Buenos Aires. He passed examinations in law and languages and worked then as a translator. In 1951, in opposition to Peron's regime, Cortzar traveled to Paris, where he lived until his death. In 1953 he married Aurora Bernrdez. They separated and Cortzar lived with Carol Dunlop in later years. From 1952 he worked for UNESCO as a freelance translator. He translated among others Robinson Crusoe and the stories of Edgar Allan Poe into Spanish, Poe's influence is also seen in his work. Los Reyes (1949) was Cortzar's earliest work of fantasy interest. The long narrative poem constituted a meditation on the role and fate of the Minotaur in his labyrinth. Cortzar's first collection of short stories, Bestiario, appeared in 1951. It included 'Casa tomada' (A House Taken Over), in which a middle-aged brother and sister find that their house is invaded by unidentified people. The story was first published by Jorge Luis Borges in the magazine called Los Canales de Buenos Aires; Borges's sister illustrated it. However, Borges did not like Cortzar as a novelist and once said: "He is trying so hard on every page to be original that it
becomes a tiresome battle of wits, no?" (Jorge Luis Borges, ed. by Richard Burgin, 1998) --'They have taken over our section,' Irene said. The knitting had reeled off from her hands and the yarn ran back toward the door and disappared under it. When she saw that the balls of yarn were on the other side, she dropped the knitting without looking at it. --'Did you have time to bring anything?' I asked hopelessly.
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--'No, nothing.' --We had what we had on. I remembered fifteen thousand pesos in the wardrobe in my bedroom. Too late now. (from 'A House Taken Over')

'Casa tomada' set the pattern for a typical Cortzar story - it begins in the real world, then introduces fantastic elements, which changes the rules of reality. In the title story a young girl senses that a tiger is roaming through her house. Other collections followed: Final de juego (1956), Las armas secretas (1959), Todos los fuegos el fuego (1966), Octaedro (1974), and Alguien que anda por ah (1977). 'Las Babas del Diablo' from Las Armas Secretas was filmed in 1966 by Michelangelo Antonioni under the title Blow-Up. In Cortazr's story, set in Paris, the protagonist is Roberto Michael, an amateur photographer, who sees a teenage boy and a young woman on a square, and shoots the scene. He develops the roll, enlarges the picture, and realizes that the woman was seducing the boy for a man in a car. The picture becomes Michael's life, he speaks of himself both in the fist person and third persons in the story: ".... nobody really knows who is telling it, if I am I or what actually occurred or what I'm seeing... or if, simply I'm telling a truth which is only my truth..." Antonioni used in his film version the theme of appearance versus reality and created around it a murder mystery, which he leaves open. Reality becomes in the film merely a subjective statement, "life itself is an illusion, a Dionysian celebration of masked and anonymous revels." (Neil D. Isaacs in Modern European Filmmakers and the Art of Adaptation, ed. by
Andrew S. Horton and Joan Magretta, 1981) "'It's like a waiting room, life is,' said the bald gentleman, carefully grinding out his cigarette with his shoe and examining his hands as if he didn't know what to do with them now; the elderly lady sighed a yes born of long years of agreeing, and put away her little bottle just as the door at the end of the corridor opened and the other lady came out with that look all the others envied, and an almost sympathetic goodbye when she got to the exit.' (from 'Second Time Around')

As a novelist Cortzar gained first attention with Los premios (1960), which appeared when the author was 46. The story centered on a group of people brought together when they win a mystery cruise in a lottery. The ship-of-fools becomes a microcosms of the world order. His masterpiece was Rayuela (1966, Hopscotch), an open-ended anti-novel, in which the reader is invited to rearrange the material. "The general idea behind Hopscotch, you see, is the proof
of a failure and the hope of a victory. But the book doesn't propose any solution; it simply limits itself to showing the possible paths one can take to knock down the wall, to see what's on the other side." (interview from Evelyn Picon Garfield, Cortzar por Cortzar, 1978) The protagonist, Horacio Oliveira, is a

writer who is surrounded by a circle of bohemian friends. After the the disappearance of La Maga, his mistress, Oliveira returns to Buenos Aires where he works in odd jobs. He meets his childhood friend, Traveler, with whom he operates an insane asylum, ending on the border of insanity himself. Oliveira seeks a new world-view outside Cartesian rationalism. Though he never succeeds, his quest is depicted with humor, superb imagery, and optimism. There are two narrative sections: chapters 1-36, which are set in Paris, and chapters 37-56, set in Buenos Aires. The third selection is entitled "Expendable Chapters." The hopscotch progress begins at chapter 73. For this reading, led by the directions, the reader jumps forward and backward through the book. Rayuela was intended to be a revolutionary novel. It opened the door to linguistic innovation of Spanish language and influenced deeply Latin American writers. The idea for a book based on disconnected noted continued in 62: Modelo para armar (1968). Here the
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Cortazar's Biography

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reader had less instructions to arrange the parts. Libro de Manuel (1973) focused on the political condition of Latin America. In this case the various characters shuttle from a mysterious Zone and the City according to Godgame-like instructions they cannot understand or disobey. The novel formed a manual for the child Manuel, a sort of collage of press clippings, and among others revealed torture techniques used by U.S. soldiers in the Far East and juxtaposed them to similar tortures suffered by Latin American political prisoners. Cortzar visited Cuba after the revolution, and in 1973 he traveled in Argentina, Peru, Ecuador, and Chile. Cortzar became in the 1970s a member of the Second Russell Tribunal for investigation of human rights abuses in Latin America. He also gave the Sandinistas the royalties of some of his last books and helped financially the families of political prisoners. When the seven-year ban on his entry into Argentina was lifted he visited his home country and Nicaragua in 1983. In 1975 Cortzar was a visiting lecturer at the University of Oklahoma, and in 1980 he was a lecturer at Barnard College in New York. In 1981 he acquired French citizenship. Cortzar received numerous awards, including Mdicis Prize for Libro de Manuel in 1974 and Rubn Daro Order of Cultural Independence in 1983. He died of leukemia in Paris on February 12, 1984. Cortzar's friend Christina Peri Rossi later pondered in her book Yo y Cortzar (2001) did the author die of AIDS instead of leukemia.
For further reading: Yo y Cortzar by Christina Peri Rossi (2001); Julio Cortzar: A Study of the Short Fiction by Ilan Stavans (1996); Hatful of Tigers by S. Ramirez (1995); Cortzar by Estela Cedola (1994); Julio Cortzar by Carmen Ortiz (1994); Julio Cortzar's Character Mosaic by Gordana Yovanovich (1991); Como leer a Julio Cortzar by Alicia H. Puleo (1990); Otro round, ed by Dale E. Carter (1988); La fascinacin de las palabras by Omar Prego (1985); En busca del unicornio by Jaime Alazraki (1983); Julio Cortzar, ed. by Pedro Lastra (1981); The Novels of Julio Cortzar by Steven Boldy (1980); The Final Island, ed. by Ivan Ivask and Jaime Alazraki (1978); Julio Cortzar by Evelyn Picon Garfield (1975) - See also: Argentine Hours by Lauren Boyington; La Pgina de Julio Cortzar ; Last Love in Constantinople (1994) by Milorad Pavic - Suom: Cortzarilta on suomennettu kokoelmat Salaiset aseet (1984), Bestiario (1999) ja Tarinoita kronoopeista ja faameista (2001).

Selected works: Presenca, 1938 (poems, under the pseudonym Julio Denis) Los reyes, 1949 Bestiario, 1951 - suom. 1999 Final del juego, 1956 Las armas secretas, 1959 Los premios, 1960 - The Winners Historias de cronopios y de famas, 1962 - Cronopios and Famas Rayuela, 1963 - Hopscotch Cuentos, 1964 Todos los fuegos el fuego, 1966 - All Fires the Fire and Other Stories El perseguidor y otros cuentos, 1967 End of the Game and Other Stories / Blow-Up and Other Stories, 1967 - film Blow-Up,
based on the short story 'The Devil's Drivel', directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (1966), starring David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles

La vuelta al da en ochenta mundos, 1967 - Around the Day in Eighty Worlds Ceremonias, 1968 Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, 1968
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62: modelo para armar, 1968 - 62: a Model Kit ltimo round, 1969 Blow-Up and Other Stories, 1969 (trans. by Paul Blackburn) Literatura en la revoluxin y revolucin en la literatura, 1970 (with Oscar Collazos and Mario Vargas Llosa) Viaje alrededor de una mesa, 1970 La isla a medioda y otros relatos, 1971 Pameos y meopas, 1971 Prosa del observatorio, 1972 (with Antonio Glvez) Libro de Manuel, 1973 - A Manual for Manuel La casilla de los Morelli y otros textos, 1973 Octaedro, 1974 Humanario, 1976 Los relatos, 1976 (3 vols.) Alguien que anda por ah y otros relatos, 1977 Un tal Lucas, 1979 - A Certain Lucas A Change of Light and Other Stories, 1980 Pars: ritmos de una ciudad, 1981 - Paris: the Essence of an Image Queremos tanto a Glenda, 1981 - We Love Glenda So Much and Other Tales Deshoras, 1983 Los autonautas de la cosmopista, 1983 (with Carol Dunlop) Nicaragua, tan violentamente dulce, 1983 - Nicaraguan Sketches Salvo el crepsculo, 1984 Argentina: aos de alambradas culturales, 1984 Nada a Pehuaj, y Adis, Robinson, 1984 Cortzar, 1985 El examen, 1986 Divertimento, 1986 Policrtica en la hora de los chacales, 1987 Fantomas contra los vampiras multinacionales, 1989 Cartas a una pelirroja, 1990 Cuentos completos (1945-1982), 1994 Julio Cortzar: siete cuentos, 1994 Obra crtica, 1994 (3 vols.)

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