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Heteronym (literature)

The literary concept of the heteronym refers to one or more imaginary character(s) created by a writer to write in different styles. Heteronyms differ from pen names (or pseudonyms, from the Greek words for "false" and "name") in that the latter are just false names, while the former are characters that have their own supposed physiques, biographies, and writing styles.[1]

Heteronyms were named and developed by the Portuguese writer and poet Fernando Pessoa in the early 20th century, but they were thoroughly explored by the Danish philosopher Kierkegaard in the 19th century and have also been used by other writers.

Pessoa's heteronyms

In Pessoa's case, there are at least 70 heteronyms (according to the latest count by Pessoa's editor Teresa Rita Lopes). Some of them are relatives or know each other; they criticise and translate each other's works. Pessoa's three chief heteronyms are Alberto Caeiro, Ricardo Reis and Álvaro de Campos; the latter two consider the former their master. There are also two whom Pessoa called semi-heteronyms, Bernardo Soares and the Baron of Teive, who are semi-autobiographical characters who write in prose, "a mere mutilation" of the Pessoa personality. There is, lastly, an orthonym, Fernando Pessoa, the namesake of the author, who also considers Caeiro his master.

The heteronyms dialogue with each other and even with Pessoa in what he calls "the theatre of being" or "drama in people". They sometimes intervened in Pessoa's social life: during Pessoa's only attested romance, a jealous Campos wrote letters to the girl, who enjoyed the game and wrote back.

Pessoa, also an amateur astrologer, created in 1915 the heteronym Raphael Baldaya, a long bearded astrologer. He elaborated horoscopes of his main heteronyms in order to determine their personalities.

Fernando Pessoa on the heteronyms

How do I write in the name of these three? Caeiro, through sheer and unexpected inspiration, without knowing or even suspecting that I'm going to write in his name. Ricardo Reis, after an abstract meditation, which suddenly takes concrete shape in an ode. Campos, when I feel a sudden impulse to write and don't know what. (My semi-heteronym Bernardo Soares, who in many ways resembles Álvaro de Campos, always appears when I'm sleepy or drowsy, so that my qualities of inhibition and rational thought are suspended; his prose is an endless reverie. He's a semi-heteronym because his personality, although not my own, doesn't differ from my own but is a mere mutilation of it. He's me without my rationalism and emotions. His prose is the same as mine, except for certain formal restraint that reason imposes on my own writing, and his Portuguese is exactly the same – whereas Caeiro writes bad Portuguese, Campos writes it reasonably well but with mistakes such as "me myself" instead of "I myself", etc.., and Reis writes better than I, but with a purism I find excessive...)

Fernando Pessoa, Letter to Adolfo Casais Monteiro, 13.01.1935, in The Book of Disquiet, tr. Richard Zenith, Penguin Classics, 2002, p. 474.

George Steiner on the heteronyms

Pseudonymous writing is not rare in literature or philosophy (Kierkegaard provides a celebrated instance). 'Heteronyms', as Pessoa called and defined them, are something different and exceedingly strange. For each of his 'voices', Pessoa conceived a highly distinctive poetic idiom and technique, a complex biography, a context of literary influence and polemics and, most arrestingly of all, subtle interrelations and reciprocities of awareness. Octavio Paz defines Caeiro as 'everything that Pessoa is not and more'. He is a man magnificently at home in nature, a virtuoso of pre-Christian innocence, almost a Portuguese teacher of Zen. Reis is a stoic Horatian, a pagan believer in fate, a player with classical myths less original than Caeiro, but more representative of modern symbolism. De Campos emerges as a Whitmanesque futurist, a dreamer in drunkenness, the Dionysian singer of what is oceanic and windswept in Lisbon. None of this triad resembles the metaphysical solitude, the sense of being an occultist medium which characterise Pessoa's 'own' intimate verse.

George Steiner, "A man of many parts", in The Observer, Sunday, 3 June 2001.

Richard Zenith on the heteronyms

Álvaro de Campos, the poet-persona who grew old with Pessoa and held a privileged place in his inventor's hearts. Soares, the assistant bookkeeper and Campos, the naval engineer never met in the pen-and-paper drama of Pessoa's heteronyms, who were frequently pitted against one other, but the two writer-characters were spiritual brothers, even if their worldly occupations were at odds. Campos wrote prose, as well as poetry, and much of it reads at it came, so to speak, from the hand of Soares. Pessoa was often unsure who was writing when he wrote, and it's curious that the very first item among the more than 25,000 pieces that make up his archives in the National Library of Lisbon bears the heading A. de C. (?) or B. de D. (or something else).

Richard Zenith, introduction to The Book of Disquiet, Penguin Classics, 2002, p. XI.

Álvaro de Campos

 
Fernando Pessoa
 
Alberto Caeiro
 
Álvaro de Campos
 
Ricardo Reis
 
Bernardo Soares

This heteronym was created by Fernando Pessoa as an alter ego who inherited his role from Alexander Search and this one from Charles Robert Anon. The latter was created when Pessoa lived in Durban, while Search was created in 1906, when Pessoa was a student at Lisbon's University, in search of his Portuguese cultural identity, after his return from Durban.

Anon was supposedly English, while Search, although English, was born in Lisbon. After the Portuguese republican revolution, in 1910, and consequent patriotic atmosphere, Pessoa dropped his English heteronyms and Álvaro de Campos was created as a Portuguese alter ego. Álvaro de Campos, born in 1890, was supposedly a Portuguese naval engineer graduated in Glasgow.

Campos sailed to the Orient, living experiences that he describes in his poem "Opiarium". He worked in London (1915), Barrow on Furness and Newcastle (1922), but became unemployed, and returned to Lisbon in 1926, the year of the military putsch that installed dictatorship. He also wrote "Lisbon Revisited (1923)" and "Lisbon Revisited (1926)".

Campos was a decadent poet, but he embraced Futurism; his poetry was strongly influenced by Walt Whitman and Marinetti. He wrote the "Ode Triumphal" and "Ode Maritime", published in the literary journal Orpheu, in 1915, and other unfinished.

While unemployed in Lisbon, he became depressed, returning to Decadentism and Pessimism. Then he wrote his master work, "Tobacco Shop", published in 1933, in the literary journal Presença.

Alberto Caeiro

Pessoa created this heteronym as "Master" of the other heteronyms and even Pessoa himself. This fictional character was born in 1889 and died in 1915, at 26, almost the same age as Pessoa's best friend Mário de Sá-Carneiro, who killed himself in Paris in 1916 less than a month shy of his 26th birthday. Thus, Sá-Carneiro seems to have inspired, at least partially, Alberto Caeiro.

Caeiro was a humble man of poor education, but a great poet "naif", he was born in Lisbon, but lives almost his life in the countryside, Ribatejo, near Lisbon, where he died. However, his poetry is full of philosophy. He wrote "Poemas Inconjuntos" (Disconnected Poems) and "O Guardador de Rebanhos" (The Keeper of Sheep), published by Fernando Pessoa in his "Art Journal" Athena in 1924–25.

In a famous letter to the literary critic Adolfo Casais Monteiro, dated January 13, 1935, Pessoa describes his "triumphal day", March 8, 1914, when Caeiro "appeared", making him write down all the poetry of "The Keeper of Sheep" at once. Caeiro influenced the Neopaganism of Pessoa, and of the heteronyms António Mora and Ricardo Reis. Poetically, he influenced mainly the Neoclassicism of Reis, which is connected to Paganism.

Ricardo Reis

 
Astrological chart of the heteronym Ricardo Reis by Fernando Pessoa.

This heteronym was created by Pessoa as a Portuguese doctor born in Oporto, on September 19, 1887. Reis supposedly studied at a boarding school run by Jesuits in which he received a classical education. He was an amateur latinist and poet; politically a monarchist, he went into exile to Brazil after the defeat of a monarchical rebellion against the Portuguese Republic in 1919. Ricardo Reis reveals his Epicureanism and Stoicism in the "Odes by Ricardo Reis", published by Pessoa in 1924, in his literary journal Athena.

Since Pessoa didn't determine the death of Reis, one can assume that he survived his author who died in 1935. In The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (1984), Portuguese Nobel prize winner José Saramago rebuilds, in his own personal outlook, the literary world of this heteronym after 1935, creating a dialog between Ricardo Reis and the ghost of his author.

List of Pessoa's heteronyms

No. Name Type *Notes
1 Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa himself Commercial correspondent in Lisbon
2 Fernando Pessoa orthonym Poet and prose writer
3 Fernando Pessoa autonym Poet and prose writer
4 Fernando Pessoa heteronym Poet, a pupil of Alberto Caeiro
5 Alberto Caeiro heteronym Poet, author of 'O guardador de Rebanhos','O Pastor Amoroso' and 'Poemas inconjuntos', master of Fernando Pessoa heteronyms, Álvaro de Campos, Ricardo Reis, António Mora and Coelho Pacheco
6 Ricardo Reis heteronym Poet and prose writer, author of 'Odes' and texts on the work of Alberto Caeiro. Biographical note: (Oporto, 1887–1936). He graduated in medicine and is an unconditional admirer of the Greek civilisation above all others, and considers himself to be an expatriate from Greece. Being a royalist he chooses to emigrate to Brazil in 1919 (Portuguese monarchy had been overthrown in 1910). In his neoclassical odes he ponders on the briefness of life, the inevitability of death and the helplessness of the human condition. This “sad epicure” tries to find some contentment through the acceptance of fate and self-discipline lives by Horatio's a motto: carpe diem (seize the day).
7 Frederico Reis heteronym/para-heteronym Essayist, brother of Ricardo Reis, upon whom he writes
8 Álvaro de Campos heteronym Poet and prose writer, a pupil of Alberto Caeiro. Biographical note: Álvaro de Campos. (Tavira, Algarve, 1890 - ?). He studies naval engineering in Scotland. He feels a foreigner wherever he is. Suffocated by a tedious and monotonous existence, failing to see the meaning of life, he looks for new sensations and travels to the Far East. When he comes back he is a renewed man. He embraces the futuristic movement and worships industrialisation and scientific and technological progress, with its hectic relentless rhythm and continuous change. There is an ecstasy of the senses, his relationship with machines and charcoal and steel is almost erotic. But in the background of this modern world lurk the shadows of the assembly line, the pollution, the emptiness of material things. The darkness of what is to come —eventually Campos tires. In his third phase, profoundly disenchanted with the present, he evokes the long-gone days of his perfectly happy childhood.
9 António Mora heteronym Philosopher and sociologist, theorist of Neopaganism, a pupil of Alberto Caeiro
10 Claude Pasteur heteronym/semi-heteronym French, translator of "CADERNOS DE RECONSTRUÇÃO PAGÃ" conducted by Antonio Mora
11 Bernardo Soares heteronym/semi-heteronym Poet and prose writer, author of the 'Book of Disquiet'
12 Vicente Guedes heteronym/semi-heteronym Poet shorty writer, translator, author of 'The Book of Disquiet' until 1920
13 Gervásio Guedes heteronym/para-heteronym Author of the text 'A Coroação de Jorge Quinto'
14 Alexander Search heteronym Poet and short story writer
15 Charles James Search heteronym/para-heteronym Translator and essayist, brother of Alexander Search
16 Jean-Méluret of Seoul heteronym/proto-heteronym French Poet and Essayist
17 Rafael Baldaya heteronym Astrologer and author of 'Tratado da Negação' and 'Princípios de Metaphysica Esotérica'
18 Barão de Teivo heteronym Prose writer, author of "Educação do Stoica" and "Daphnis e Chloe"
19 Charles Robert Anon heteronym/semi-heteronym Poet, philosopher and story writer
20 A. A. Crosse pseudonym/proto-heteronym Author and Puzzle-solver
21 Thomas Crosse heteronym/proto-heteronym English epic character/occultist, popularised in Portuguese culture
22 I. I. Crosse heteronym/para-heteronym ----
23 David Merrick heteronym/semi-heteronym Poet, storyteller and Playwright
24 Lucas Merrick heteronym/para-heteronym Short story writer, perhaps brother David Merrick
25 Pêro Botelho heteronym/pseudonym Short story writer and author of Letters
26 Abílio Quaresma heteronym/character/meta-heteronym A character inspired by Botelho Pêro and author of short detective stories
27 Inspector Guedes character/meta-heteronym? A character inspired by Botelho Pêro and author of short detective stories
28 Uncle Pork pseudonym/character A character inspired by Botelho Pêro and author of short detective stories
29 Frederick Wyatt alias/heteronym Poet and prose writer (in the English language)
30 Rev. Walter Wyatt character Possibly brother of Frederick Wyatt
31 Alfred Wyatt character Another brother of Frederick Wyatt/a resident of Paris
32 Maria José heteronym/proto-heteronym Wrote and signed "A Carta da Corcunda para o Serralheiro"
33 Chevalier de Pas pseudonym/proto-heteronym Author of poems and letters
34 Efbeedee Pasha heteronym/proto-heteronym Author of humoristic "Stories"
35 Faustino Antunes/A. Moreira heteronym/pseudonym Psychologist, author of "Ensaio sobre a Intuição"
36 Carlos Otto heteronym/proto-heteronym Poet and author of "Tratado de Lucta Livre"
37 Michael Otto pseudonym/para-heteronym Probably brother of Carlos Otto who was entrusted with the translation into English of "Tratado de Lucta Livre"
38 Dr. Gaudencio Nabos heteronym Author of humorous poems, sketches. Practiced medicine in Durban, London
39 Horace James Faber heteronym/semi-heteronym short story writer and essayist (in English)
40 Navas heteronym/para-heteronym Translated Horace James Faber in Portuguese
41 Pantaleão heteronym/proto-heteronym Poet and prose
42 Torquato Fonseca Mendes da Cunha Rey heteronym/meta-heteronym Deceased author of a text, Pantaleão decided to publish
43 Joaquim Moura Costa proto-heteronym/semi-heteronym satirical poet, Republican activist, member of "O PHOSPHORO"
44 Sher Henay proto-heteronym/pseudonym Compiler and author of the preface of a sensationalist anthology in English
45 Anthony Gomes semi-heteronym/character Philosopher, author of "Historia Cómica do Affonso Çapateiro"
46 Professor Trochee proto-heteronym/pseudonym Author of an essay with humorous advice for young poets
47 Willyam Links Esk character Signed a letter written in English on 13/4/1905
48 António de Seabra pseudonym/proto-heteronym Literary critic
49 João Craveiro pseudonym/proto-heteronym Journalist, follower of Sidónio Pereira
50 Tagus pseudonym Collaborator in "NATAL MERCURY" (Durban, South Africa), inventor and solver of riddles
51 Pipa Gomes draft heteronym Collaborator in "O PHOSPHORO"
52 Ibis character/a pseudonym A character from Pessoa's childhood, accompanying him until the end of his life/also signed poems
53 Dr. Gaudencio Turnips proto-heteronym/pseudonym Director of "O PALRADOR", English-Portuguese journalist and humorist
54 Pip proto-heteronym/pseudonym Poet, humorous anecdotes. Predecessor of Dr. Pancrazio
55 Dr. Pancrazio proto-heteronym/pseudonym Storyteller, poet and creator of charades
56 Luís António Congo proto-heteronym/pseudonym Collaborator in "O PALRADOR", columnist and presenter of Lanca Eduardo
57 Eduardo Lance proto-heteronym/pseudonym Luso-Brazilian poet
58 A. Francisco de Paula Angard proto-heteronym/pseudonym Collaborator in "O PALRADOR", author of "textos scientificos"
59 Pedro da Silva Salles/Zé Pad proto-heteronym/alias Author and director of the section of anecdotes at "O PALRADOR"
60 José Rodrigues do Valle/Scicio proto-heteronym/alias "O PALRADOR", author of charades and 'literary manager'
61 Dr. Caloiro proto-heteronym/pseudonym "O PALRADOR", reporter and author of "A pesca das pérolas"
62 Adolph Moscow proto-heteronym/pseudonym "O PALRADOR", novelist, author of "Os Rapazes de Barrowby"
63 Marvell Kisch proto-heteronym/pseudonym Author of a novel announced in "O PALRADOR", called "A Riqueza de um Doido"
64 Gabriel Keene proto-heteronym/pseudonym Author of a novel announced in "O PALRADOR", called "Em Dias de Perigo"
65 Sableton-Kay proto-heteronym/pseudonym Author of a novel announced in "O PALRADOR", called "A Lucta Aérea"
66 Morris & Theodor pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
67 Diabo Azul pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
68 Parry pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
69 Gallião Pequeno pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
70 Urban Accursio alias "O PALRADOR", author of charades
71 Cecília pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
72 José rasteiro proto-heteronym/pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of proverbs and riddles
73 Nympha Negra pseudonym "O PALRADOR", author of charades
74 Diniz da Silva pseudonym/proto-heteronym Author of the poem "Loucura" and collaborator in "EUROPE"
75 Herr Prosit pseudonym Translator of 'O Estudante de Salamanca' by Espronceda
76 Henry More proto-heteronym Author and prose writer
77 Wardour character? Astral communicator, poetry coach
78 J. M. Hyslop character? Poet

Other writers and their heteronyms

  • Søren Kierkegaard - Had more than a dozen heteronyms with distinct biographies and personalities.
  • Bitty Navarro - Mexican-Spanish poet, asexual activist, and BuzzFeed contributor, has explored heteronyms in poetry and microblogging.
  • David Solway, Canadian writer, writing as Andreas Karavis.
  • Kent Johnson, American scholar and poet writing as Araki Yasusada.
  • Peter Russell, English poet, translated The Elegies of Quintilius, a Latin poet.
  • Robin Skelton, Canadian poet and occultist, writing as French surrealist Georges Zuk.
  • Geoffrey Hill. English poet, translated The Songbook Of Sebastian Arrurruz
  • B.H. Fairchild, American poet, writing as Roy Eldridge Garcia.
  • Daniel Handler, American writer, writing as Lemony Snicket.
  • Romain Gary, French writer, writing as Émile Ajar, Fosco Sinibaldi, Shatan Bogat.
  • Antoine Volodine, French writer, writing as Elli Kronauer, Manuela Draeger, Lutz Bassman.
  • Brian O'Nolan writing as Flann O'Brien and Myles na gCopaleen.
  • Arnon Grunberg writing as Marek van der Jagt.
  • Eghia Temirchipashyan, Armenian writer, writing as Graser Atom, Devanio, Melania, Nurania, Graser's Cat ...
  • Raymond A. Palmer (1910-1977), American editor and writer; published stories under his own name and multiple pseudonyms, several of which were attributed different personalities and biographies (e.g., "A.E. Steber" was a Russian military officer who engaged in espionage against Nazi Germany before relocating to the US).
  • Internet personality MsScribe - Had a similar number and variety of heteronyms to Kierkegaard, used to manipulate the Harry Potter fandom.
  • Laura Albert (born 1955) wrote under the name JT LeRoy, an adolescent male persona she described as an "avatar" that allowed her to write things that she was unable to write as herself.
  • Jane Holland, poet and novelist, also writes as Victoria Lamb, Elizabeth Moss, Beth Good and Hannah Coates.
  • Frank X. Gaspar, Portuguese American poet and novelist, writes as Renata Ferreira, a woman who worked for the resistance in the final years of Portugal's fascist regime in his book The Poems of Renata Ferreira published in 2020.

Heteronyms in music

See also

Notes

  1. ^ ZENITH, Richard (2002), The Book of Disquiet, Penguin Classics, 2002.
  1. ^ ZENITH, Richard (2002), The Book of Disquiet, Penguin Classics, 2002.
  2. ^ Pessoa, by Richard Zenith
  3. ^ Pessoa by Richard Zenith
  4. ^ Pessoa by Richard Zenith
  5. ^ Pessoa, by Richard Zenith
  6. ^ Fred Nadis (2013) The Man From Mars: Ray Palmer's Amazing Pulp Journey, NY: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, p. 74
  7. ^ Albert, Laura. "Laura Albert at The Moth "My Avatar & Me" " YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2013-01-30.
  8. ^ "Jane Holland" The Crime Readers' Association.
  9. ^ "A Guide to the Many Personalities of Nicky Minaj" www.papermag.com. Retrieved 2015-08-27.

References

See the introductory parts in:

  • Fernando Pessoa & Co: Selected Poems, edited and translated by Richard Zenith, Grove Press, 1999
  • The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa, edited and translated by Richard Zenith, Grove Press, 2002
  • The Book of Disquiet, edited and translated by Richard Zenith, Penguin classics, 2003

External links

  • George Steiner, "A man of many parts".
  • Fernando Pessoa at Vidas Lusófonas
Authority control: National libraries
  • Germany
  • Israel
  • United States

heteronym, literature, other, uses, heteronym, disambiguation, literary, concept, heteronym, refers, more, imaginary, character, created, writer, write, different, styles, heteronyms, differ, from, names, pseudonyms, from, greek, words, false, name, that, latt. For other uses see Heteronym disambiguation The literary concept of the heteronym refers to one or more imaginary character s created by a writer to write in different styles Heteronyms differ from pen names or pseudonyms from the Greek words for false and name in that the latter are just false names while the former are characters that have their own supposed physiques biographies and writing styles 1 Heteronyms were named and developed by the Portuguese writer and poet Fernando Pessoa in the early 20th century but they were thoroughly explored by the Danish philosopher Kierkegaard in the 19th century and have also been used by other writers Contents 1 Pessoa s heteronyms 1 1 Alvaro de Campos 1 2 Alberto Caeiro 1 3 Ricardo Reis 1 4 List of Pessoa s heteronyms 2 Other writers and their heteronyms 3 Heteronyms in music 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksPessoa s heteronyms EditIn Pessoa s case there are at least 70 heteronyms according to the latest count by Pessoa s editor Teresa Rita Lopes Some of them are relatives or know each other they criticise and translate each other s works Pessoa s three chief heteronyms are Alberto Caeiro Ricardo Reis and Alvaro de Campos the latter two consider the former their master There are also two whom Pessoa called semi heteronyms Bernardo Soares and the Baron of Teive who are semi autobiographical characters who write in prose a mere mutilation of the Pessoa personality There is lastly an orthonym Fernando Pessoa the namesake of the author who also considers Caeiro his master The heteronyms dialogue with each other and even with Pessoa in what he calls the theatre of being or drama in people They sometimes intervened in Pessoa s social life during Pessoa s only attested romance a jealous Campos wrote letters to the girl who enjoyed the game and wrote back Pessoa also an amateur astrologer created in 1915 the heteronym Raphael Baldaya a long bearded astrologer He elaborated horoscopes of his main heteronyms in order to determine their personalities Fernando Pessoa on the heteronyms How do I write in the name of these three Caeiro through sheer and unexpected inspiration without knowing or even suspecting that I m going to write in his name Ricardo Reis after an abstract meditation which suddenly takes concrete shape in an ode Campos when I feel a sudden impulse to write and don t know what My semi heteronym Bernardo Soares who in many ways resembles Alvaro de Campos always appears when I m sleepy or drowsy so that my qualities of inhibition and rational thought are suspended his prose is an endless reverie He s a semi heteronym because his personality although not my own doesn t differ from my own but is a mere mutilation of it He s me without my rationalism and emotions His prose is the same as mine except for certain formal restraint that reason imposes on my own writing and his Portuguese is exactly the same whereas Caeiro writes bad Portuguese Campos writes it reasonably well but with mistakes such as me myself instead of I myself etc and Reis writes better than I but with a purism I find excessive Fernando Pessoa Letter to Adolfo Casais Monteiro 13 01 1935 in The Book of Disquiet tr Richard Zenith Penguin Classics 2002 p 474 dd dd dd George Steiner on the heteronyms Pseudonymous writing is not rare in literature or philosophy Kierkegaard provides a celebrated instance Heteronyms as Pessoa called and defined them are something different and exceedingly strange For each of his voices Pessoa conceived a highly distinctive poetic idiom and technique a complex biography a context of literary influence and polemics and most arrestingly of all subtle interrelations and reciprocities of awareness Octavio Paz defines Caeiro as everything that Pessoa is not and more He is a man magnificently at home in nature a virtuoso of pre Christian innocence almost a Portuguese teacher of Zen Reis is a stoic Horatian a pagan believer in fate a player with classical myths less original than Caeiro but more representative of modern symbolism De Campos emerges as a Whitmanesque futurist a dreamer in drunkenness the Dionysian singer of what is oceanic and windswept in Lisbon None of this triad resembles the metaphysical solitude the sense of being an occultist medium which characterise Pessoa s own intimate verse George Steiner A man of many parts in The Observer Sunday 3 June 2001 dd dd dd Richard Zenith on the heteronyms Alvaro de Campos the poet persona who grew old with Pessoa and held a privileged place in his inventor s hearts Soares the assistant bookkeeper and Campos the naval engineer never met in the pen and paper drama of Pessoa s heteronyms who were frequently pitted against one other but the two writer characters were spiritual brothers even if their worldly occupations were at odds Campos wrote prose as well as poetry and much of it reads at it came so to speak from the hand of Soares Pessoa was often unsure who was writing when he wrote and it s curious that the very first item among the more than 25 000 pieces that make up his archives in the National Library of Lisbon bears the heading A de C or B de D or something else Richard Zenith introduction to The Book of Disquiet Penguin Classics 2002 p XI dd dd dd Alvaro de Campos Edit Fernando Pessoa Alberto Caeiro Alvaro de Campos Ricardo Reis Bernardo Soares This heteronym was created by Fernando Pessoa as an alter ego who inherited his role from Alexander Search and this one from Charles Robert Anon The latter was created when Pessoa lived in Durban while Search was created in 1906 when Pessoa was a student at Lisbon s University in search of his Portuguese cultural identity after his return from Durban Anon was supposedly English while Search although English was born in Lisbon After the Portuguese republican revolution in 1910 and consequent patriotic atmosphere Pessoa dropped his English heteronyms and Alvaro de Campos was created as a Portuguese alter ego Alvaro de Campos born in 1890 was supposedly a Portuguese naval engineer graduated in Glasgow Campos sailed to the Orient living experiences that he describes in his poem Opiarium He worked in London 1915 Barrow on Furness and Newcastle 1922 but became unemployed and returned to Lisbon in 1926 the year of the military putsch that installed dictatorship He also wrote Lisbon Revisited 1923 and Lisbon Revisited 1926 Campos was a decadent poet but he embraced Futurism his poetry was strongly influenced by Walt Whitman and Marinetti He wrote the Ode Triumphal and Ode Maritime published in the literary journal Orpheu in 1915 and other unfinished While unemployed in Lisbon he became depressed returning to Decadentism and Pessimism Then he wrote his master work Tobacco Shop published in 1933 in the literary journal Presenca Alberto Caeiro Edit Pessoa created this heteronym as Master of the other heteronyms and even Pessoa himself This fictional character was born in 1889 and died in 1915 at 26 almost the same age as Pessoa s best friend Mario de Sa Carneiro who killed himself in Paris in 1916 less than a month shy of his 26th birthday Thus Sa Carneiro seems to have inspired at least partially Alberto Caeiro Caeiro was a humble man of poor education but a great poet naif he was born in Lisbon but lives almost his life in the countryside Ribatejo near Lisbon where he died However his poetry is full of philosophy He wrote Poemas Inconjuntos Disconnected Poems and O Guardador de Rebanhos The Keeper of Sheep published by Fernando Pessoa in his Art Journal Athena in 1924 25 In a famous letter to the literary critic Adolfo Casais Monteiro dated January 13 1935 Pessoa describes his triumphal day March 8 1914 when Caeiro appeared making him write down all the poetry of The Keeper of Sheep at once Caeiro influenced the Neopaganism of Pessoa and of the heteronyms Antonio Mora and Ricardo Reis Poetically he influenced mainly the Neoclassicism of Reis which is connected to Paganism Ricardo Reis Edit Astrological chart of the heteronym Ricardo Reis by Fernando Pessoa This heteronym was created by Pessoa as a Portuguese doctor born in Oporto on September 19 1887 Reis supposedly studied at a boarding school run by Jesuits in which he received a classical education He was an amateur latinist and poet politically a monarchist he went into exile to Brazil after the defeat of a monarchical rebellion against the Portuguese Republic in 1919 Ricardo Reis reveals his Epicureanism and Stoicism in the Odes by Ricardo Reis published by Pessoa in 1924 in his literary journal Athena Since Pessoa didn t determine the death of Reis one can assume that he survived his author who died in 1935 In The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis 1984 Portuguese Nobel prize winner Jose Saramago rebuilds in his own personal outlook the literary world of this heteronym after 1935 creating a dialog between Ricardo Reis and the ghost of his author List of Pessoa s heteronyms Edit No Name Type Notes1 Fernando Antonio Nogueira Pessoa himself Commercial correspondent in Lisbon2 Fernando Pessoa orthonym Poet and prose writer3 Fernando Pessoa autonym Poet and prose writer4 Fernando Pessoa heteronym Poet a pupil of Alberto Caeiro5 Alberto Caeiro heteronym Poet author of O guardador de Rebanhos O Pastor Amoroso and Poemas inconjuntos master of Fernando Pessoa heteronyms Alvaro de Campos Ricardo Reis Antonio Mora and Coelho Pacheco6 Ricardo Reis heteronym Poet and prose writer author of Odes and texts on the work of Alberto Caeiro Biographical note Oporto 1887 1936 He graduated in medicine and is an unconditional admirer of the Greek civilisation above all others and considers himself to be an expatriate from Greece Being a royalist he chooses to emigrate to Brazil in 1919 Portuguese monarchy had been overthrown in 1910 In his neoclassical odes he ponders on the briefness of life the inevitability of death and the helplessness of the human condition This sad epicure tries to find some contentment through the acceptance of fate and self discipline lives by Horatio s a motto carpe diem seize the day 7 Frederico Reis heteronym para heteronym Essayist brother of Ricardo Reis upon whom he writes8 Alvaro de Campos heteronym Poet and prose writer a pupil of Alberto Caeiro Biographical note Alvaro de Campos Tavira Algarve 1890 He studies naval engineering in Scotland He feels a foreigner wherever he is Suffocated by a tedious and monotonous existence failing to see the meaning of life he looks for new sensations and travels to the Far East When he comes back he is a renewed man He embraces the futuristic movement and worships industrialisation and scientific and technological progress with its hectic relentless rhythm and continuous change There is an ecstasy of the senses his relationship with machines and charcoal and steel is almost erotic But in the background of this modern world lurk the shadows of the assembly line the pollution the emptiness of material things The darkness of what is to come eventually Campos tires In his third phase profoundly disenchanted with the present he evokes the long gone days of his perfectly happy childhood 9 Antonio Mora heteronym Philosopher and sociologist theorist of Neopaganism a pupil of Alberto Caeiro10 Claude Pasteur heteronym semi heteronym French translator of CADERNOS DE RECONSTRUCAO PAGA conducted by Antonio Mora11 Bernardo Soares heteronym semi heteronym Poet and prose writer author of the Book of Disquiet 12 Vicente Guedes heteronym semi heteronym Poet shorty writer translator author of The Book of Disquiet until 192013 Gervasio Guedes heteronym para heteronym Author of the text A Coroacao de Jorge Quinto 14 Alexander Search heteronym Poet and short story writer15 Charles James Search heteronym para heteronym Translator and essayist brother of Alexander Search16 Jean Meluret of Seoul heteronym proto heteronym French Poet and Essayist17 Rafael Baldaya heteronym Astrologer and author of Tratado da Negacao and Principios de Metaphysica Esoterica 18 Barao de Teivo heteronym Prose writer author of Educacao do Stoica and Daphnis e Chloe 19 Charles Robert Anon heteronym semi heteronym Poet philosopher and story writer20 A A Crosse pseudonym proto heteronym Author and Puzzle solver21 Thomas Crosse heteronym proto heteronym English epic character occultist popularised in Portuguese culture22 I I Crosse heteronym para heteronym 23 David Merrick heteronym semi heteronym Poet storyteller and Playwright24 Lucas Merrick heteronym para heteronym Short story writer perhaps brother David Merrick25 Pero Botelho heteronym pseudonym Short story writer and author of Letters26 Abilio Quaresma heteronym character meta heteronym A character inspired by Botelho Pero and author of short detective stories27 Inspector Guedes character meta heteronym A character inspired by Botelho Pero and author of short detective stories28 Uncle Pork pseudonym character A character inspired by Botelho Pero and author of short detective stories29 Frederick Wyatt alias heteronym Poet and prose writer in the English language 30 Rev Walter Wyatt character Possibly brother of Frederick Wyatt31 Alfred Wyatt character Another brother of Frederick Wyatt a resident of Paris32 Maria Jose heteronym proto heteronym Wrote and signed A Carta da Corcunda para o Serralheiro 33 Chevalier de Pas pseudonym proto heteronym Author of poems and letters34 Efbeedee Pasha heteronym proto heteronym Author of humoristic Stories 35 Faustino Antunes A Moreira heteronym pseudonym Psychologist author of Ensaio sobre a Intuicao 36 Carlos Otto heteronym proto heteronym Poet and author of Tratado de Lucta Livre 37 Michael Otto pseudonym para heteronym Probably brother of Carlos Otto who was entrusted with the translation into English of Tratado de Lucta Livre 38 Dr Gaudencio Nabos heteronym Author of humorous poems sketches Practiced medicine in Durban London39 Horace James Faber heteronym semi heteronym short story writer and essayist in English 40 Navas heteronym para heteronym Translated Horace James Faber in Portuguese41 Pantaleao heteronym proto heteronym Poet and prose42 Torquato Fonseca Mendes da Cunha Rey heteronym meta heteronym Deceased author of a text Pantaleao decided to publish43 Joaquim Moura Costa proto heteronym semi heteronym satirical poet Republican activist member of O PHOSPHORO 44 Sher Henay proto heteronym pseudonym Compiler and author of the preface of a sensationalist anthology in English45 Anthony Gomes semi heteronym character Philosopher author of Historia Comica do Affonso Capateiro 46 Professor Trochee proto heteronym pseudonym Author of an essay with humorous advice for young poets47 Willyam Links Esk character Signed a letter written in English on 13 4 190548 Antonio de Seabra pseudonym proto heteronym Literary critic49 Joao Craveiro pseudonym proto heteronym Journalist follower of Sidonio Pereira50 Tagus pseudonym Collaborator in NATAL MERCURY Durban South Africa inventor and solver of riddles51 Pipa Gomes draft heteronym Collaborator in O PHOSPHORO 52 Ibis character a pseudonym A character from Pessoa s childhood accompanying him until the end of his life also signed poems53 Dr Gaudencio Turnips proto heteronym pseudonym Director of O PALRADOR English Portuguese journalist and humorist54 Pip proto heteronym pseudonym Poet humorous anecdotes Predecessor of Dr Pancrazio55 Dr Pancrazio proto heteronym pseudonym Storyteller poet and creator of charades56 Luis Antonio Congo proto heteronym pseudonym Collaborator in O PALRADOR columnist and presenter of Lanca Eduardo57 Eduardo Lance proto heteronym pseudonym Luso Brazilian poet58 A Francisco de Paula Angard proto heteronym pseudonym Collaborator in O PALRADOR author of textos scientificos 59 Pedro da Silva Salles Ze Pad proto heteronym alias Author and director of the section of anecdotes at O PALRADOR 60 Jose Rodrigues do Valle Scicio proto heteronym alias O PALRADOR author of charades and literary manager 61 Dr Caloiro proto heteronym pseudonym O PALRADOR reporter and author of A pesca das perolas 62 Adolph Moscow proto heteronym pseudonym O PALRADOR novelist author of Os Rapazes de Barrowby 63 Marvell Kisch proto heteronym pseudonym Author of a novel announced in O PALRADOR called A Riqueza de um Doido 64 Gabriel Keene proto heteronym pseudonym Author of a novel announced in O PALRADOR called Em Dias de Perigo 65 Sableton Kay proto heteronym pseudonym Author of a novel announced in O PALRADOR called A Lucta Aerea 66 Morris amp Theodor pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades67 Diabo Azul pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades68 Parry pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades69 Galliao Pequeno pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades70 Urban Accursio alias O PALRADOR author of charades71 Cecilia pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades72 Jose rasteiro proto heteronym pseudonym O PALRADOR author of proverbs and riddles73 Nympha Negra pseudonym O PALRADOR author of charades74 Diniz da Silva pseudonym proto heteronym Author of the poem Loucura and collaborator in EUROPE 75 Herr Prosit pseudonym Translator of O Estudante de Salamanca by Espronceda76 Henry More proto heteronym Author and prose writer77 Wardour character Astral communicator poetry coach78 J M Hyslop character PoetOther writers and their heteronyms EditSoren Kierkegaard Had more than a dozen heteronyms with distinct biographies and personalities Bitty Navarro Mexican Spanish poet asexual activist and BuzzFeed contributor has explored heteronyms in poetry and microblogging David Solway Canadian writer writing as Andreas Karavis Kent Johnson American scholar and poet writing as Araki Yasusada Peter Russell English poet translated The Elegies of Quintilius a Latin poet Robin Skelton Canadian poet and occultist writing as French surrealist Georges Zuk Geoffrey Hill English poet translated The Songbook Of Sebastian Arrurruz B H Fairchild American poet writing as Roy Eldridge Garcia Daniel Handler American writer writing as Lemony Snicket Romain Gary French writer writing as Emile Ajar Fosco Sinibaldi Shatan Bogat Antoine Volodine French writer writing as Elli Kronauer Manuela Draeger Lutz Bassman Brian O Nolan writing as Flann O Brien and Myles na gCopaleen Arnon Grunberg writing as Marek van der Jagt Eghia Temirchipashyan Armenian writer writing as Graser Atom Devanio Melania Nurania Graser s Cat Raymond A Palmer 1910 1977 American editor and writer published stories under his own name and multiple pseudonyms several of which were attributed different personalities and biographies e g A E Steber was a Russian military officer who engaged in espionage against Nazi Germany before relocating to the US Internet personality MsScribe Had a similar number and variety of heteronyms to Kierkegaard used to manipulate the Harry Potter fandom Laura Albert born 1955 wrote under the name JT LeRoy an adolescent male persona she described as an avatar that allowed her to write things that she was unable to write as herself Jane Holland poet and novelist also writes as Victoria Lamb Elizabeth Moss Beth Good and Hannah Coates Frank X Gaspar Portuguese American poet and novelist writes as Renata Ferreira a woman who worked for the resistance in the final years of Portugal s fascist regime in his book The Poems of Renata Ferreira published in 2020 Heteronyms in music EditDavid Bowie Systematically employed heteronyms as a performer his personae changing given the content of the album on which they appear including but not limited to Ziggy Stardust Aladdin Sane and The Thin White Duke Nicki Minaj American singer and rapper also raps as Roman Zolanski and Harajuku Barbie MF Doom Had several heteronyms such as Madvillain and Viktor Vaughn Eminem Also raps as Marshall Mathers Slim Shady and Stan Lawrence Rothman Has nine heteronyms such as Elizabeth and Alesiter See also EditSock puppet Internet Notes Edit ZENITH Richard 2002 The Book of Disquiet Penguin Classics 2002 ZENITH Richard 2002 The Book of Disquiet Penguin Classics 2002 Pessoa by Richard Zenith Pessoa by Richard Zenith Pessoa by Richard Zenith Pessoa by Richard Zenith Fred Nadis 2013 The Man From Mars Ray Palmer s Amazing Pulp Journey NY Jeremy P Tarcher Penguin p 74 Albert Laura Laura Albert at The Moth My Avatar amp Me YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 2013 01 30 Jane Holland The Crime Readers Association A Guide to the Many Personalities of Nicky Minaj www papermag com Retrieved 2015 08 27 References EditSee the introductory parts in Fernando Pessoa amp Co Selected Poems edited and translated by Richard Zenith Grove Press 1999 The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa edited and translated by Richard Zenith Grove Press 2002 The Book of Disquiet edited and translated by Richard Zenith Penguin classics 2003External links EditGeorge Steiner A man of many parts Fernando Pessoa at Vidas Lusofonas Authority control National libraries Germany Israel United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heteronym literature amp oldid 1129181116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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