Mario Vargas Llosa
Peruvian
author
Also known as: Jorge Mario Pedro Vargas
Llosa
Written and fact-checked by Encyclopedia Britannic
Last Updated: Jul 1, 2024 • Article History
Mario
Vargas Llosa (born March 28, 1936, Arequipa, Peru) is a Peruvian Spanish writer
whose commitment to social change is evident in his novels, plays, and essays.
In 1990, he was an unsuccessful candidate for president of Peru. Vargas Llosa
was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Literature “for his cartography of structures
of power and his trenchant images of the individual’s resistance, revolt, and
defeat.”
Vargas Llosa received his early education in Cochabamba, Bolivia, where his grandfather was the Peruvian consul.
He attended a series of schools in Peru before entering a military school, Leoncio Prado, in Lima in 1950; he later attended the University of San Marcos in Lima.
His first published work was La
huida del Inca (1952; “The Escape of the Inca”), a three-act play. Thereafter
his stories began to appear in Peruvian literary reviews, and he coedited
Cuadernos de composición (1956–57; “Composition Books”) and Literatura
(1958–59). He worked as a journalist and broadcaster and attended the
University of Madrid. In 1959 he moved to Paris, where he lived until 1966 in a
Latin American expatriate community that included Argentine Julio Cortázar and
Chilean Jorge Edwards. He later set his novel Travesuras de la niña mala (2006;
The Bad Girl) in Paris during this period, its plot a reflection of Vargas
Llosa’s lifelong appreciation of Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary (1857).
Vargas
Llosa’s first novel, La ciudad y los perros (1963; “The City and the Dogs,”
filmed in Spanish, 1985; Eng. trans. The Time of the Hero), was widely
acclaimed. Translated into more than a dozen languages, this novel, set in the
Leoncio Prado, describes adolescents striving for survival in a hostile and
violent environment. The corruption of the military school reflects the larger
malaise afflicting Peru. The book was filmed twice, in Spanish (1985) and in
Russian (1986), the second time as Yaguar.
The novel
La casa verde (1966; The Green House), set in the Peruvian jungle, combines
mythical, popular, and heroic elements to capture the sordid, tragic, and
fragmented reality of its characters. Los jefes (1967; The Cubs and Other
Stories, filmed as The Cubs, 1973) is a psychoanalytic portrayal of an
adolescent who has been accidentally castrated. Conversación en la catedral
(1969; Conversation in the Cathedral) deals with Manuel Odría’s regime (1948–56).
The novel Pantaleón y las visitadoras (1973; “Pantaleón and the Visitors,”
filmed in Spanish, 1975; Eng. trans. Captain Pantoja and the Special Services,
filmed 2000) is a satire of the Peruvian military and religious fanaticism. His
semi-autobiographical novel La tía Julia y el escribidor (1977; Aunt Julia and
the Scriptwriter, filmed 1990 as Tune in Tomorrow) combines two distinct
narrative points of view to produce a contrapuntal effect.
Vargas
Llosa also wrote a critical study of the fiction of Gabriel García Márquez in
García Márquez: Historia de un deicidio (1971; “García Márquez: Story of a
God-Killer”), a study of Gustave Flaubert in La orgía perpetua: Flaubert y
“Madame Bovary” (1975; The Perpetual Orgy: Flaubert and Madame Bovary), and a
study of the works of Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus in Entre Sartre y Camus
(1981; “Between Sartre and Camus”).
After
living three years in London, he was a writer-in-residence at Washington State
University in 1969. In 1970 he settled in Barcelona. He returned to Lima in
1974 and lectured and taught widely throughout the world. A collection of his
critical essays in English translation was published in 1978. La guerra del fin
del mundo (1981; The War of the End of the World), an account of the 19th-century
political conflicts in Brazil, became a best seller in Spanish-speaking
countries. Three of his plays—La señorita de Tacna (1981; The Young Lady of
Tacna), Kathie y el hipopotamo (1983; Kathie and the Hippopotamus), and La
chunga (1986; “The Jest”; Eng. trans. La chunga)—were published in Three Plays
(1990).
In 1990
Vargas Llosa lost his bid for the presidency of Peru in a runoff against
Alberto Fujimori, an agricultural engineer and the son of Japanese immigrants.
Vargas Llosa wrote about this experience in El pez en el agua: memorias (1993;
A Fish in the Water: A Memoir). He became a citizen of Spain in 1993 and was
awarded the Cervantes Prize the following year. Despite his new nationality, he
continued to write about Peru in such novels as Los cuadernos de don Rigoberto
(1997; The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto). His later works included the novels La
fiesta del chivo (2000; The Feast of the Goat; film 2005), El paraíso en la
otra esquina (2003; The Way to Paradise), Travesuras de la niña mala (2006; The
Bad Girl), El sueño del celta (2010; The Dream of the Celt), El héroe discreto
(2013; The Discreet Hero), Cinco esquinas (2016; The Neighborhood), and Tiempos
recios (2019: “Fierce Times”).
Vargas
Llosa also wrote the nonfiction volumes Cartas a un joven novelista (1997;
Letters to a Young Novelist), El lenguaje de la pasión (2001; The Language of
Passion), and La civilización del espectáculo (2012; “The Civilization of
Entertainment”). The pamphlet Mi trayectoria intelectual (2014; My Intellectual
Journey) contains a speech he gave documenting his drift away from Marxist
ideology and toward liberalism. In La llamada de la tribu (2018; “The Call of
the Tribe”), which was described as an “intellectual autobiography,” Vargas
Llosa examined the works that influenced him.
In 2015
Vargas Llosa made his acting debut at the Teatro Real in Madrid, where he
appeared as a duke in Los cuentos de la peste (“Tales of the Plague”), his
stage adaptation of Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
This article was most recently revised and
updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Complutense
University of Madrid
University,
Madrid, Spain
Also
known as: Central University, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Universidad de
Alcalá de Henares, University of Alcalá de Henares, University of Madrid
Main
National University of San Marcos of Lima.
His first
published work was La huida del Inca (1952; “The Escape of the Inca”), a
three-act play. Thereafter his stories began to appear in Peruvian literary
reviews, and he coedited Cuadernos de composición (1956–57; “Composition
Books”) and Literatura (1958–59). He worked as a journalist and broadcaster and
attended the University of Madrid. In 1959 he moved to Paris, where he lived
until 1966 in a Latin American expatriate community that included Argentine
Julio Cortázar and Chilean Jorge Edwards. He later set his novel Travesuras de
la niña mala (2006; The Bad Girl) in Paris during this period, its plot a
reflection of Vargas Llosa’s lifelong appreciation of Gustave Flaubert’s Madame
Bovary (1857).
Vargas
Llosa’s first novel, La ciudad y los perros (1963; “The City and the Dogs,”
filmed in Spanish, 1985; Eng. trans. The Time of the Hero), was widely
acclaimed. Translated into more than a dozen languages, this novel, set in the
Leoncio Prado, describes adolescents striving for survival in a hostile and
violent environment. The corruption of the military school reflects the larger
malaise afflicting Peru. The book was filmed twice, in Spanish (1985) and in
Russian (1986), the second time as Yaguar.
The novel
La casa verde (1966; The Green House), set in the Peruvian jungle, combines
mythical, popular, and heroic elements to capture the sordid, tragic, and
fragmented reality of its characters. Los jefes (1967; The Cubs and Other
Stories, filmed as The Cubs, 1973) is a psychoanalytic portrayal of an
adolescent who has been accidentally castrated. Conversación en la catedral
(1969; Conversation in the Cathedral) deals with Manuel Odría’s regime
(1948–56). The novel Pantaleón y las visitadoras (1973; “Pantaleón and the
Visitors,” filmed in Spanish, 1975; Eng. trans. Captain Pantoja and the Special
Services, filmed 2000) is a satire of the Peruvian military and religious
fanaticism. His semi-autobiographical novel La tía Julia y el escribidor (1977;
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, filmed 1990 as Tune in Tomorrow) combines two
distinct narrative points of view to produce a contrapuntal effect.
Vargas
Llosa also wrote a critical study of the fiction of Gabriel García Márquez in
García Márquez: Historia de un deicidio (1971; “García Márquez: Story of a God-Killer”),
a study of Gustave Flaubert in La orgía perpetua: Flaubert y “Madame Bovary”
(1975; The Perpetual Orgy: Flaubert and Madame Bovary), and a study of the
works of Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus in Entre Sartre y Camus (1981;
“Between Sartre and Camus”).
After
living three years in London, he was a writer-in-residence at Washington State
University in 1969. In 1970 he settled in Barcelona. He returned to Lima in
1974 and lectured and taught widely throughout the world. A collection of his
critical essays in English translation was published in 1978. La guerra del fin
del mundo (1981; The War of the End of the World), an account of the
19th-century political conflicts in Brazil, became a best seller in
Spanish-speaking countries. Three of his plays—La señorita de Tacna (1981; The
Young Lady of Tacna), Kathie y el hipopotamo (1983; Kathie and the
Hippopotamus), and La chunga (1986; “The Jest”; Eng. trans. La chunga)—were
published in Three Plays (1990).
In 1990
Vargas Llosa lost his bid for the presidency of Peru in a runoff against
Alberto Fujimori, an agricultural engineer and the son of Japanese immigrants.
Vargas Llosa wrote about this experience in El pez en el agua: memorias (1993;
A Fish in the Water: A Memoir). He became a citizen of Spain in 1993 and was
awarded the Cervantes Prize the following year. Despite his new nationality, he
continued to write about Peru in such novels as Los cuadernos de don Rigoberto
(1997; The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto). His later works included the novels La
fiesta del chivo (2000; The Feast of the Goat; film 2005), El paraíso en la
otra esquina (2003; The Way to Paradise), Travesuras de la niña mala (2006; The
Bad Girl), El sueño del celta (2010; The Dream of the Celt), El héroe discreto
(2013; The Discreet Hero), Cinco esquinas (2016; The Neighborhood), and Tiempos
recios (2019: “Fierce Times”).
Vargas
Llosa also wrote the nonfiction volumes Cartas a un joven novelista (1997;
Letters to a Young Novelist), El lenguaje de la pasión (2001; The Language of
Passion), and La civilización del espectáculo (2012; “The Civilization of
Entertainment”). The pamphlet Mi trayectoria intelectual (2014; My Intellectual
Journey) contains a speech he gave documenting his drift away from Marxist
ideology and toward liberalism. In La llamada de la tribu (2018; “The Call of
the Tribe”), which was described as an “intellectual autobiography,” Vargas
Llosa examined the works that influenced him.
In 2015
Vargas Llosa made his acting debut at the Teatro Real in Madrid, where he
appeared as a duke in Los cuentos de la peste (“Tales of the Plague”), his
stage adaptation of Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron.
With
affection,
Ruben
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