José Donoso

Chilean author
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Quick Facts
Born:
October 5, 1924, Santiago, Chile
Died:
December 7, 1996, Santiago (aged 72)

José Donoso (born October 5, 1924, Santiago, Chile—died December 7, 1996, Santiago) was a Chilean novelist and short-story writer who was important in the development of the Latin American new novel. He used dark surrealism, black comedy, and social satire to explore the lives of decaying aristocrats in a morally disintegrating society.

After studying at the Pedagogical Institute of Santiago for three years, Donoso attended Princeton University, where he received a B.A. degree in 1951. He taught at the Catholic University of Chile and the University of Chile in the 1950s and toward the end of the decade worked as a journalist. After lecturing at the University of Iowa (1965–67), he took up residence in Spain.

Donoso’s first published works were short stories, and his collection Veraneo y otros cuentos (“Summer Vacation and Other Stories”) appeared in 1955. He established his reputation with the debut novel Coronación (1957; Coronation), which won him the William Faulkner Foundation Prize in 1962. It presents the moral collapse of an aristocratic family and suggests that an insidious loss of values affects all sectors of society. Donoso’s second and third novels, Este domingo (1966; This Sunday) and El lugar sin límites (1966; “The Place Without Limits”; Hell Has No Limits), depict characters barely able to subsist in an atmosphere of desolation and anguish. El obsceno pajaro de la noche (1970; The Obscene Bird of Night), regarded as his masterpiece, presents a hallucinatory, often grotesque, world, and explores the fears, frustrations, dreams, and obsessions of his characters with profound psychological insight. In the novel Casa de campo (1978; A House in the Country), which Donoso considered his best work, he examines in a Surrealist style the breakdown of social order in postcolonial Latin America.

Donoso returned to live in Chile in 1982. The author of numerous antigovernment articles, he was briefly detained in 1985 after he protested the dismissal of dissident writers from their teaching positions. His other works include El jardín de al lado (1981; The Garden Next Door), La desesperanza (1986; “Hopelessness”; Eng. trans. Curfew), and Taratuta: naturaleza muerta con cachimba (1990; Taratuta, and Still Life with Pipe).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.