Hubbry Logo
Rosa ChacelRosa ChacelMain
Open search
Rosa Chacel
Community hub
Rosa Chacel
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Rosa Chacel
Rosa Chacel
from Wikipedia

Rosa Clotilde Chacel Arimón (3 June 1898 – 27 July 1994) was a Spanish writer. She was a native of Valladolid.

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Chacel was born in Valladolid, the daughter of a teacher who sent her to live with her grandmother in Madrid. Chacel's move to Madrid occurred in 1908. Because of her weak health, she was home-schooled by her mother.

By 1909, Chacel's mother enlisted her at Madrid's Escuela de artes y oficios to study drawing, but, soon after, Chacel followed her teacher, Fernanda Francés, to the newly built Escuela del hogar y Profesional de la Mujer, also in Madrid. It was while in the latter school that Chacel began to take some feminist views. In 1915, Chacel, intrigued by the world of sculpture, enrolled at the Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, but she soon lost interest in the aforementioned topic and abandoned the school by 1918.[1]

Chacel then went on to become a regular at the Cafe Granja del Henar and at the Ateneo de Madrid. These two places were favorite locations for aspiring writers from all over Spain and other European countries. She delivered a controversial speech there, after a conference about women and their possibilities. Like much of the world at that era, machista views predominated in Spain, and Chacel's dialogue on that conference were considered off base or nonsensical by many members of Madrid's society.

Chacel, nevertheless, went on championing feminism as a new way to live for modern women, and, in 1921, she married a famous painter of the time, Timoteo Perez Rubio. In 1922 the couple settled in Rome after Pérez Rubio was granted a scholarship at the Academia de España. That same year, Chacel wrote her first article for the Ultra magazine. In 1927, she and her husband returned to Madrid.

In 1930, Chacel wrote her first novel, Estacion, Ida y Vuelta. That same year, the Perez Rubio-Chacel couple had a child, Carlos. For the next three years, Rosa dedicated herself to motherhood and to promoting her novel. In 1933, she lived alone for six months in Berlin, to recover from her mother's death and a creative crisis. Soon after her return to Spain, the Spanish Civil War broke out. Pérez Rubio enlisted in the Republican Army and Chacel performed, among other things, as a nurse. During the same period she also contributed literary magazines Hora de España and Revista de Occidente.[2]

This new, political problem, forced Chacel to move multiple times with her son, and she lived in Barcelona, Valencia, Paris. In the meantime, her husband had the responsibility of moving out of the country the treasuries of the Museo del Prado to preserve them from the war devastation. After the end of the war, the family reunited and travelled to Brazil, where they lived for three decades, with short stays in Buenos Aires.[3]

Exile

[edit]

The next years Chacel lived in relative obscurity: a well-known writer but one who had made no new projects in years. This changed in 1959, however, when she won a Guggenheim Fellowship,[4] which allowed her to travel to New York City and return to writing. Chacel worked in New York until 1961, when, with her home country living a calmed down social state, she returned to Spain. In May 1963, Chacel returned to Brazil, where she remained until 1970, when she returned to Spain for a short stay. She would live in Brazil for three more years, as, in 1973, she made her second return to her home country.[5]

Return to Spain

[edit]
Rosa Chacel

In 1977, her husband of 56 years died, and Chacel, who was a very frequent flyer between Madrid and Rio de Janeiro, decided to stay in Spain for good. She used her newly found status as a widow to try to rescue some of her old works and to write more novels.

Her works include Acrópolis, published in 1984 and in which she writes about the Sapphic Circle of Madrid, of which she was a member along with Victorina Durán, Elena Fortún, and Matilde Ras.[6]

Death and legacy

[edit]

She died peacefully in Madrid on 7 August 1994, aged 96.[7]

The Spanish national airline Iberia Airlines – a company which Chacel perhaps saw as it grew – just like in Luisa Carvajal y Mendoza's case, decided to honor Chacel by naming an Airbus A340 jetliner airliner after her.[8][9] Perhaps ironically, the "Rosa Chacel Airbus A340" flies very frequently between Madrid's Barajas International Airport and Buenos Aires' Ezeiza International Airport or Rio de Janeiro.

Awards and honors

[edit]
  • Guggenheim Fellowship
  • Chacel was granted a Doctor Honoris Causa degree by the University of Valladolid (1989).
  • Towards the end of her life, she won various prestigious awards, some of whom were given by King Juan Carlos.
  • In 1987, she received the "National Award of the Letters (writing)", an award reserved for the very best writers of Spain.
  • In 1990, she received the "Premio Castilla y Leon de las letras" ("Castilla y Leon award of the letters"), an award whose winners are chosen by the King.

Works

[edit]

Novels

[edit]
  • Estación. Ida y vuelta, 1930.
  • Teresa, 1941, Buenos Aires, Nuevo Romance.
  • Memorias de Leticia Valle, 1945, Buenos Aires, Emecé.
  • La Sinrazón, 1960, Buenos Aires, Losada.
  • Trilogy Escuela de Platón:
    • Barrio de Maravillas, 1976, Barcelona, Seix Barral.
    • Acrópolis, 1984, Barcelona Seix Barral.
    • Ciencias naturales, 1988, Barcelona, Seix Barral.
  • Novelas antes de tiempo, 1981, Barcelona, Bruguera.

Short Story

[edit]
  • Sobre el piélago, 1952, Buenos Aires, Imán.
  • Ofrenda a una virgen loca, 1961, México, Universidad de Veracruz.
  • Icada, Nevda, Diada, 1971, Barcelona, Seix Barral.
  • Balaam y otros cuentos, 1989, Relatos infantiles, Barcelona, Mondadori.
  • Narrativa Breve, 2003, Valladolid, Fundación Jorge Guillén (Obra Completa; 7).

Poetry

[edit]
  • A la orilla de un pozo, 1936.
  • Versos prohibidos, 1978, Madrid, Caballo Griego para la Poesía.
  • Poesía (1931-1991), 1992, Barcelona, Tusquets.

Notes

[edit]

Books and newspapers

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Rosa Chacel is a Spanish novelist, poet, and essayist known for her intellectually rigorous and experimental prose, her association with the Generation of '27, and her philosophical approach to narrative influenced by José Ortega y Gasset. Born in Valladolid on June 3, 1898, she developed a dense, aesthetic style that combined psychological insight, formal innovation, and reflections on identity, exile, and human freedom, establishing her as one of the most demanding voices in 20th-century Spanish literature. Chacel grew up in a cultured bourgeois family and received early education at home before moving to Madrid in 1908, where she studied sculpture at the Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and engaged with avant-garde circles. She collaborated with key literary magazines such as Revista de Occidente and Gaceta Literaria, and lived in Rome from 1921 to 1927 with her husband, the painter Timoteo Pérez Rubio. A Republican supporter, she went into exile in 1939, residing primarily in Argentina and Brazil for decades while continuing to publish. She returned permanently to Spain in the 1970s and died in Madrid on July 27, 1994. Her debut novel Estación. Ida y vuelta appeared in 1930, followed by significant works such as Teresa (1941), Memorias de Leticia Valle (1946), La sinrazón (1960), and the autobiographical trilogy comprising Barrio de Maravillas (1976), Acrópolis (1984), and Ciencias Naturales (1988). She also produced poetry collections including A la orilla de un pozo (1936), essays, translations, and autobiographical texts like Desde el amanecer (1972). Though underrecognized during much of her lifetime due to exile and gender biases, she gained late acclaim, receiving the Premio de la Crítica for Barrio de Maravillas and the Premio Nacional de las Letras Españolas in 1987, among other honors. Her oeuvre is celebrated for its poetic intensity, exploration of female autonomy, and enduring dialogue with philosophical and aesthetic traditions.

Early Life and Education

Childhood in Valladolid

Rosa Clotilde Chacel Arimón was born on June 3, 1898, in Valladolid, Spain, into a cultured family with strong literary and artistic inclinations. She was the grandniece of the renowned romantic poet José Zorrilla on her mother's side. Her mother, Rosa Cruz Arimón Pacheco, was a teacher by profession, while her father, Francisco Chacel Barbero, worked as a government employee; the household fostered free-thinking ideas and a deep appreciation for culture. Due to persistent health issues that prevented regular school attendance, Chacel was educated at home during her early years in Valladolid, primarily under her mother's guidance. This arrangement allowed her to thrive in a solitary yet intellectually rich environment, with early exposure to literature through family readings, her father's impromptu verse compositions during walks, and parental improvisations of theatrical and musical pieces. The liberal and creative atmosphere of her family profoundly influenced her formative years, nurturing an early passion for books and ideas. Chacel remained in Valladolid until approximately age nine, when her family relocated to Madrid around 1907-1908 in search of better opportunities and improved conditions for her health.

Artistic Training in Madrid

In 1908, Rosa Chacel relocated from Valladolid to Madrid with her family, settling in the Maravillas neighborhood to live with her grandmother amid ongoing health concerns from her childhood. Due to her frail condition, she did not attend conventional school and instead received home-schooling from her mother, a teacher who provided a cultured and progressive education. Her formal artistic training commenced in 1909 at the Escuela de Artes y Oficios, where she pursued drawing studies, followed by attendance at the Escuela del Hogar y Profesional de la Mujer. Around 1915, she enrolled in the sculpture program at the prestigious Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, but persistent ill health compelled her to abandon these studies after three years, approximately in 1918. While in Madrid, Chacel immersed herself in the city's dynamic intellectual milieu, regularly participating in tertulias at the Café Granja del Henar and the Ateneo de Madrid, where she connected with prominent figures in literature and culture. She adopted openly feminist stances from an early point in her adult life. In the 1920s, she delivered a notable and controversial lecture at the Ateneo titled "La mujer y sus posibilidades," addressing the capacities and prospects of women in a manner that marked an early public assertion of her feminist views.

Personal Life

Marriage to Timoteo Pérez Rubio

Rosa Chacel married the painter Timoteo Pérez Rubio in 1921. The couple relocated to Rome the following year when Pérez Rubio received a scholarship to study at the Academia de España en Roma, a position he held from 1922 to 1927. Chacel resided with her husband at the Academy throughout this period, sharing in the artistic and cultural environment of the institution. The stay in Rome lasted until 1927, during which the couple also visited various European cities, broadening their exposure to diverse artistic and intellectual currents. This time abroad marked a significant phase in Chacel's early adulthood, offering new cultural perspectives that contributed to her personal and intellectual maturation. The couple returned to Madrid together in 1927.

Family and Motherhood

Rosa Chacel and her husband Timoteo Pérez Rubio had their only child, a son named Carlos, in 1930. This marked her entry into motherhood during a period of relative stability following their return from Italy. During the Spanish Civil War, Chacel took her young son Carlos to safety in France, escaping Madrid in 1937 and heading first to Paris, while her husband remained in the capital as president of the Junta de Defensa del Tesoro Artístico, responsible for protecting and evacuating the collections of the Museo del Prado to Geneva. The separation reflected the urgent demands placed on the family by the conflict. They reunited at the end of the war and went into joint exile in Brazil in 1940 with their son. Timoteo Pérez Rubio died in Brazil in 1977 after 56 years of marriage. Following his death, Chacel settled permanently in Madrid, ending years of alternating residences between South America and Spain. In her later years, she wrote a book-length study of her husband’s paintings titled Timoteo Pérez Rubio y sus retratos del jardín, published in 1980, which serves as a biographical tribute to his artistic career.

Pre-War Literary Career

Early Publications and Influences

Rosa Chacel's literary debut occurred in 1922 when she published the relato "Las ciudades" in the second issue of the avant-garde magazine Ultra, shortly after moving to Rome with her husband. During her residence in Rome from 1921 to 1927, she immersed herself in reading major modernist authors and philosophers, including José Ortega y Gasset, Marcel Proust, and James Joyce, whose works profoundly shaped her emerging style. She began composing her first novel, Estación. Ida y vuelta, during this period, completing it by 1926–1927 before returning to Madrid. Estación. Ida y vuelta appeared in 1930 as her debut novel, marked by strong influence from James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, particularly after she encountered the 1926 Spanish translation, which convinced her that "in novel writing anything is possible." The work employs Joycean and Proustian interior monologue to delve into the protagonist's psychological landscape, blending autobiography with reflections on personal entrapment and self-rediscovery, while incorporating Orteguian concepts such as perspectivism, razón vital, and the focus on inner life over external plot. Chacel's style in the novel is dense and intellectual, featuring psychological depth, metafictional digressions, blurred boundaries between narrator and author, and modernist techniques that prioritize the imagined soul and philosophical inquiry. Early feminist themes emerge through the insistent presence of the female body, which disrupts masculinized narrative conventions, and the exploration of a "new feminine identity" that challenges traditional gender models within the avant-garde context. In 1936, Chacel published her first poetry collection, A la orilla de un pozo, a volume of sonnets that further demonstrated her engagement with formal innovation and introspective themes.

Involvement in Literary Circles

In the 1920s, Rosa Chacel actively participated in Madrid's dynamic literary scene through regular attendance at the tertulias held at the Café Granja del Henar and the Ateneo de Madrid, two of the few venues that openly welcomed women's participation in intellectual discussions. These gatherings allowed her to engage with contemporary writers and thinkers during a period of intense cultural ferment. Chacel is recognized as a member of the Generation of '27, though as a woman writer she often occupied a marginal position within the predominantly male group and was described as a "rara avis" who pursued an independent path. During the 1930s, Chacel contributed essays and other writings to prominent periodicals such as Revista de Occidente, where she collaborated from the late 1920s onward, and Hora de España, publishing critical and literary pieces in its issues from 1937 to 1938. Her involvement reflected her immersion in the era's progressive intellectual currents.

Spanish Civil War and Exile

Support for the Republic and War Years

Rosa Chacel supported the Republican side throughout the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). As a committed defender of the Republic, she signed the manifesto of the Alianza de Intelectuales Antifascistas para la Defensa de la Cultura and contributed to Republican-aligned publications, including El Mono Azul and Hora de España. During the conflict, Chacel worked briefly as a nurse with the Cruz Roja and collaborated actively with Hora de España, publishing seven pieces—primarily critical-literary and philosophical-ideological essays, along with one poem—across its first seven issues from January to July 1937. Her contributions defended the continuity of Spanish progressive literary traditions, advocated for high artistic standards amid the popular cause, and expressed sympathy for philosophical anarchism, linking it to humanitarian values and Christian ethics in her final essay for the magazine. She also worked as a nurse in a hospital set up in Madrid's Residencia de Estudiantes. Her husband, the painter Timoteo Pérez Rubio, was responsible for overseeing the evacuation of the Museo del Prado's art collections to safeguard them during the war. This role kept him engaged in the Republican zone while Chacel and their young son faced increasing dangers in Madrid. As the war intensified, Chacel left Madrid with her son in 1938, traveling through Barcelona and Valencia before reaching Paris. This journey separated her from her husband temporarily amid the chaos of the conflict.

Departure into Exile

Having taken refuge in Paris during the war, Rosa Chacel continued into permanent exile after the Republic's defeat in 1939. She departed for the Americas around 1939-1940, marking the beginning of her long exile from Francoist Spain. She settled primarily in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 1940, which became her main residence during much of her exile period. She also spent periods in Buenos Aires, Argentina, along with brief stays in other locations including Athens and Geneva. Accompanied by her son Carlos, she embarked on this transatlantic journey as part of the broader Republican exodus. The exile lasted approximately 36 years throughout the Franco dictatorship, during which she published little at first but persisted in her writing efforts despite personal and economic difficulties. She returned permanently to Spain in the early 1970s.

Exile in South America

Life in Brazil and Other Countries

After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War and the establishment of Franco's regime, Rosa Chacel went into exile in South America around 1940. Her official residence was established in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, though she spent significant periods in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where she engaged more actively with literary and cultural circles. This arrangement created a dual exile dynamic: Brazil served as her formal base while Buenos Aires became the center of her intellectual activity, involving frequent travel between the two cities from 1940 to 1959. Chacel's early exile years in South America were marked by social and professional isolation, marginalization from both Argentine intellectual milieus and Spanish exile communities, and difficulties in integration, which contributed to limited publication opportunities and a sense of solitude. In 1959 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship, which allowed her to reside in New York City until 1961 and resume a phase of intense writing activity. Upon completing her fellowship, Chacel returned to South America and settled again in Rio de Janeiro, where she lived for most of the following decade. She remained primarily in Rio de Janeiro through the early 1970s, with her residence there documented into the early part of that decade. Over time, her circumstances in Brazil supported steadier output in essays, stories, and novels despite the ongoing challenges of exile.

Literary Output During Exile

During her exile in South America, primarily in Argentina and Brazil, Rosa Chacel maintained a steady, though less prolific, literary production compared to her pre-war years, publishing novels and short story collections mainly through Latin American presses. Her output included works that explored themes of identity, gender, existential conflict, and introspection, often drawing on autobiographical elements and philosophical influences. The novel Teresa appeared in 1941 in Buenos Aires, a fictionalized biography of Teresa Mancha, the lover of José de Espronceda, which critiqued romantic myths, exposed gender inequalities of the nineteenth century, and emphasized the female struggle for individual freedom. In 1945, Memorias de Leticia Valle was published in Buenos Aires; presented as a diary, it narrated the coming-of-age of an adolescent girl through her intellectual and emotional awakening, her relationship with an older man, and her early maturity, blending autobiographical resonance with introspective depth. After a period of fewer narrative publications, La sinrazón followed in 1960 in Buenos Aires, widely regarded as one of her major achievements, structured around a love triangle and probing psychological tensions, existential dilemmas, guilt, and the interplay of will and sensuality under influences such as Kierkegaard and Rousseau. Chacel also produced short fiction during this time, beginning with Sobre el piélago in 1952 in Buenos Aires, a collection of imaginative, nearly fantastic stories frequently featuring maritime motifs. This was followed by Ofrenda a una virgen loca in 1961 in Mexico, another volume of short stories. In 1971, Icada, Nevda, Diada appeared, compiling the contents of her two prior story collections along with additional pieces. She continued writing essays and poetry throughout the exile, though with limited early publications. A Guggenheim Fellowship received in 1959 supported time in New York and aided renewed productivity during this phase.

Return to Spain and Late Career

Permanent Return and Later Publications

After the death of her husband, the painter Timoteo Pérez Rubio, in Valença, Brazil, on August 8, 1977, Rosa Chacel returned definitively to Spain and settled permanently in Madrid. She resided there for the remainder of her life, until her death in 1994. In this final phase, Chacel published Versos prohibidos in 1978, a collection of poetry. She followed this with Timoteo Pérez Rubio y sus retratos del jardín in 1980, a study devoted to her husband's paintings, particularly his portraits and garden-themed works. Her other late publications included Balaam y otros cuentos in 1989, a volume of children's stories, as well as various essays and memoirs. In 1992, she released Poesía (1931-1991), a comprehensive collection of her verse spanning six decades, incorporating poems from earlier volumes such as Versos prohibidos alongside previously uncollected and inédit pieces.

Autobiographical Trilogy

Rosa Chacel's late autobiographical trilogy, known as Escuela de Platón, consists of three novels: Barrio de Maravillas (1976), Acrópolis (1984), and Ciencias naturales (1988). The trilogy narrates the childhood, adolescence, and early adulthood of two girls from the same generation as Chacel, tracing their maturation into women amid the cultural and social milieu of early twentieth-century Madrid. The first volume, Barrio de Maravillas, introduces the protagonists in their early years in the Maravillas neighborhood of Madrid, capturing the formative experiences of their intellectual and emotional development. The second, Acrópolis, follows their progression through adolescence and engagement with artistic and philosophical circles. The concluding volume, Ciencias naturales, explores their entry into maturity, incorporating reflections on science, art, and personal identity. Published in Chacel's seventies and eighties after her return to democratic Spain, the trilogy stands as one of her most significant achievements, blending autobiographical elements with fictional narrative to revisit her own formative years. Critics have praised its introspective depth and its role in illuminating the intellectual world of early twentieth-century Spanish women.

Awards and Legacy

Late Recognition and Honors

Rosa Chacel's literary achievements gained significant official recognition in the later decades of her life, particularly after her permanent return to Spain in the 1970s. In 1959, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship, which supported her creative work during her period of exile. Subsequent honors came from Spanish institutions in the years leading up to her death. In 1987, she was awarded the Premio Nacional de las Letras Españolas in recognition of her complete body of work. In 1989, the University of Valladolid granted her the title of Doctor Honoris Causa. The following year, in 1990, she received the Premio Castilla y León de las Letras. Shortly before her death in 1994, while hospitalized, she was bestowed the Medalla de Oro al Mérito en las Bellas Artes by King Juan Carlos I.

Critical Reception and Influence

Rosa Chacel is widely regarded as a major figure of the Generation of '27 and one of the most important women writers in twentieth-century Spanish literature. Her prose is characterized by its intellectual rigor, philosophical density, and introspective depth, often incorporating surrealist imagery, acute psychological insight, and feminist perspectives that challenge traditional gender roles. Influenced by José Ortega y Gasset's ideas on perspectivism and phenomenology, Chacel's writing style has frequently been compared to that of James Joyce and Marcel Proust for its stream-of-consciousness techniques and exploration of inner experience. Her long exile following the Spanish Civil War significantly delayed her recognition within Spain, where her works remained largely inaccessible or overlooked for decades. Recognition grew substantially during Spain's transition to democracy in the 1980s, when she was increasingly acknowledged as a canonical author, culminating in late honors that affirmed her stature. Chacel proved prolific across multiple genres, producing novels, essays, poetry, and translations, while her late autobiographical trilogy stands as a particularly significant achievement that synthesizes her lifelong concerns with memory, identity, and intellectual inquiry. Her influence extends to subsequent generations of Spanish writers, especially women authors exploring philosophical and feminist themes in innovative forms.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.