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Vitorino Nemésio

Vitorino Nemésio Mendes Pinheiro da Silva (19 December 1901, in Praia da Vitória – 20 February 1978, in Lisbon) was a Portuguese poet, author and intellectual from Terceira, Azores, best known for his novel Mau Tempo No Canal, as well as being a professor in the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon and member of the Academy of Sciences of Lisbon.[1][2]

Vitorino Nemésio
Bust of the author Vitorino Nemésio
BornVitorino Nemésio Mendes Pinheiro da Silva
19 December 1901
Praia da Vitória, Terceira
Died20 February 1978(1978-02-20) (aged 76)
Lisbon
Resting placeLisbon
OccupationPoet
LanguagePortuguese
NationalityPortuguese
EducationPost-Secondary
Alma materUniversity of Coimbra, University of Lisbon
Period1921-25, 1930-34
GenreFiction, Romance, Poetry, Biography
SubjectExistensialism, Revolutionary Humanism, Neo-Realism
Literary movementRepublican
Notable worksCanto Matinal (1916), PaçO de Milhafre (1924), Varanda de Pilatos (1926), Sob Os Signos de Agora (1932), A Mocidade de Herculano (1934), RelaçõEs Francesas do Romantismo PortuguêS (1936), O Bicho Harmonioso (1938), Eu, Comovido a Oeste (1940), Mau Tempo No Canal (1944), Ondas Médias (1945), Festa Redonda (1950), Nem Toda a Noite a Vida (1953), O Segredo de Ouro Preto (1954), O PãO e a Culpa (1955), Corsário das Ilhas (1956), Conhecimento de Poesia (1958), O Verbo e a Morte (1959), Canto de Véspera (1966), Jornal do Observador (1974), Sapateia Açoriana, Andamento HolandêS e Outros Poemas (1976)
Notable awardsRicardo Malheiros Literary Prize (1944), National Literary Prize (1965), Montaigne Prize (1974)
SpouseGabriela Monjardino de Azevedo Gomes
ChildrenGeorgina (November 1926), Jorge (April 1929), Manuel (July 1930) and Ana Paula (At the end of 1931).

Biography edit

Vitorino Nemesio was the son of Vitorino Gomes da Silva and Maria da Glória Mendes Pinheiro, and born in Praia da Vitória, on Terceira island, Azores (1901).

His early education did not reflect the academic career that he would have; he encountered many problems as a student and was expelled from secondary school, repeating his fifth year of studies. Of his time in the secondary school in Angra do Heroísmo, Nemésio indicated his fondness for history classes, and attributed this interest to Manuel António Ferreira Deusdado (his history teacher), who introduced him to the social sciences.

At 16 years of age, for the first time, Nemésio travelled to the district capital of Horta, to complete his entry exams for the National School: he was barely able to accomplish a passing mark. He did complete the entry exams in the General Course on 16 July 1918. His stayed in Horta from May to August 1918. On 13 August the newspaper O Telégrafo (although disparagingly referring to Nemésio as a "provincial") published a notice about the young author's first book of poetry, Canto Matinal, which was sent to the editor Manuel Emídio (it would later be published in 1916). While at the school, he contributed to Eco Académico: Semanário dos Alunos do Liceu de Angra and helped to found the magazine Estrela d'Alva: Revista Literária Ilustrada e Noticiosa while completing his studies in Angra.

Although relatively young, Nemesio had already developed republican ideals, having participated in literary, republican, and anarchist-unionist meetings while living in Angra. He was influenced primarily by his friend, Jaime Brasil, five-years his senior (the first intellectual mentor he knew), as well as others, such as the lawyer Luís da Silva Ribeiro and the author-librarian, Gervásio Lima.

In 1918, just before the First World War ended, Horta was a centre of maritime commerce with a vibrant night life. It was an obligatory port-of-call, a place for refurnishing chips and giving time off to the crew. The trans-Atlantic telegraph cable companies had installed themselves in Horta, contributing to a cosmopolitan environment, that much later would inspire his Mau Tempo no Canal, on which he was to begin working after 1939. In 1919, he volunteered for military service in the infantry, enabling him to travel outside the Azores for the first time.[3]

Academia edit

In Lisbon, he worked as a coordinator for A Pátria, A Imprensa de Lisboa and Última Hora, while completing his secondary school studies in Coimbra (in 1921). He eventually enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the University of Coimbra, where he worked as an editor in the student newspaper. By 1923, he joined the Coimbra Revolta Lodge of the Grand Order of Lusitania, a masonic group. While working for the magazine Bizâncio, he learnt of his father's death. Three years later (1925), he switched from Law to Social and Applied Sciences in the Faculty of Letters to concentrate on the Historical and Geographic Sciences. During his first trip to Spain (Salamanca, specifically), with the Academic Choir in 1923, he met the Spanish writer, philosopher and republican Miguel Unamuno (1864–1936), a leader in revolutionary humanist theory, and staunch anti-Francist, with whom he would continue to correspond for years. With Afonso Duarte, António de Sousa, Branquinho da Fonseca, Gaspar Simões, among others, he founded the magazine Tríptico. His studies turned to Romance Languages by 1925; at the time, he worked with José Régio, João Gaspar Simões and António de Sousa on the journal Humanidade: Quinzenário de Estudantes de Coimbra.

In Coimbra on 12 February 1926, he married Gabriela Monjardino de Azevedo Gomes, with whom he would have four children: Georgina (November 1926), Jorge (April 1929), Manuel (July 1930) and Ana Paula (at the end of 1931).

In 1930, Nemésio transferred to the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon, where, a year later, he concluded his course in Romance Languages and began offering classes in Italian Literature and, later, Spanish Literature (after 1931). He obtained his Doctorate in 1934 from the University of Lisbon, with his thesis A Mocidade de Herculano Até à Volta do Exílio (English: The Youth of Herculano until His Return from Exile). Between 1937 and 1939, he lectured at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, returning in the last year to the Faculty of Letters in Lisbon.

His most complex, dense and subtle novel, Mau Tempo No Canal, remains one of the primary examples of contemporary Portuguese literature, which he would finally publish in 1944. Encompassing the islands of Faial, Pico, São Jorge and Terceira, the novel evokes the period of 1917-1919, when the author lived in Horta and where people such as Dr. José Machado de Serpa (a Republican senator), Father Nunes da Rosa (professor at the secondary school) and Osório Goulart (poet) were contemporaries. After his seminal work, Nemésis never returned to writing novels; in an unpublished epilogue, under the title Morro autor de um romance único (English: I will die as the author of a single novel), he stated that Mau Tempo No Canal was the high-point in his long literary career.

On visiting Horta for a second time, in 1946, he wrote Corsário das Ilhas (English: The Islands Corsair), in which he reflected on his schooling:

"I like Horta like loquats. I long nostalgically for who I was, I don't how, when I was here. Everything I imagined and, more or less, was frustrated by was here; but Horta is not just going beyond...Matriz on high, where the homes of the nobility stood and which the Jesuits adapted, and another two or three always cubical, fastidious church convents on high; each points, when I leave, to the parishes of Conceição and Angústias, it is what is needed to complete a good citizenship, white as a bride: Horta."

Thirty years later Nemésio continued to remember the village of Horta as his "first refuge, of patriarchal hospitality and gentility in everything, or for everything".

In 1958, he lectured in Brazil. On 12 September 1971, when he reached the public service retirement age, he gave his final lecture at the Faculty in Lisbon; a period of 40 years of service.

Later life edit

He authored and presented the television program Se bem me lembro, which contributed to popularising his literary importance, while at the same time directing the newspaper O Dia from 11 December 1975 to 25 October 1976.

He died on 20 February 1978 in Lisbon, at the CUF Hospital, and was laid to rest in his adopted home, Coimbra. Before his death, he asked his son to bury him in the cemetery of Santo António dos Olivais, and that the bells should play the Alleluia.

Public works edit

His early literary writings were inspired by the Azores. Afonso Lopes Vireira would later note the presence of "childhood memories, and loves, pains and figures of humility, who in these pages, are alive and obsessed with the sea". Vitorino Nemésio's personal experiences are generally present in his published works, beginning with his volume of stories in Paço do Milhafre (English: Eagle Palace), in 1924. Prefaced by Afonso Lopes Vieira, and later retitled O Mistério do Paço do Milhafre (English: The Mystery of Eagle Palace), the work has been in print since 1949. During his long literary career, the author has never stopped surprising readers. In his novels, for example, he transmitted a sense of originality, in particular, with his descriptions of places and complex characters, in which he was generously human (such as in Varanda de Pilatos, published in 1927, or his volume of novels A Casa Fechada (English: The Closed House), comprising three stories: O Tubarão (English: The Shark), Negócio de Pomba (English: Dove Business) and A Casa Fechada).

Vitorino Nemésio was one of the great writers of contemporary Portuguese literature, receiving in 1965, the Prémio Nacional da Literatura (English: National Literary Prize), as well as the 1974 Montaigne Prize. He was a writer of fiction and poetry, a chronicler, a biographer, a historian of literature, a journalist, a philosopher, a letter writer, a language expert and a television writer. This was ironic in view of his terrible beginnings in the secondary school on Terceira.

Generally regional in his perspectives, his works elaborated on Azorean life, along with sentimental memories of his childhood, revealing a populist preoccupation with simple people who were profoundly human and living through aspects of human suffering. He published biographies, including his doctoral dissertation on Alexandre Herculano, and his biography of Queen Saint Elizabeth of Portugal. He also wrote of his journeys to Brazil, the Azores and Madeira, discussed diverse subjects associated with Portuguese and Brazilian history, including a dissertation on Gil Vicente, and wrote poetry criticism.

Nemésio was also a poet, publish works uninterruptedly from 1916 (Canto Matinal) to 1976 (Era do Átomo Crise do Homem). Óscar Lopes, writing on his poetry, noted two currents of verse in his work Nem toda a Noite a Vida (English: Not All Night Is There Life). The first current is mostly regional; in particular, nostalagia for island life, childhood, adolescences, his father and first forbidden love, which are obvious in O Bicho Harmonioso (English: The Harmonious Beast) and Eu, Comovido a Oeste. In his later works there is a transformation, his themes are more metaphysical and religious in tone; he debated themes of life and death, of being and the search for the meaning of life: purely existentialist philosophy. In addition, the writer cultivates a popular poetry marked by Azorean symbolism, in which he was regularly accused of being a regionalist literary.

Poetry edit

  • Canto Matinal (1916)
  • O Bicho Harmonioso (1938)
  • Eu, Comovido a Oeste (1940)
  • Festa Redonda (1950)
  • Nem Toda a Noite a Vida (1953)
  • O Pão e a Culpa (publicada em 1955)
  • O Verbo e a Morte (1959)
  • Canto de Véspera (1966)
  • Sapateia Açoriana, Andamento Holandês e Outros Poemas (1976)

Fiction edit

  • Paço de Milhafre (1924)
  • Varanda de Pilatos (1926)
  • Mau Tempo no Canal (1944), which won the Ricardo Malheiros Literary Prize;

Dissertations and Critics edit

  • Sob os Signos de Agora (1932)
  • A Mocidade de Herculano (1934)
  • Relações Francesas do Romantismo PortuguêS (1936)
  • Ondas Médias (1945)
  • Conhecimento de Poesia (1958)

Chronicles edit

  • O Segredo de Ouro Preto (1954)
  • Corsário das Ilhas (1956)
  • Jornal do Observador (1974).

Bibliography edit

  • Garcia, J. M. (1978). Vitorino Nemésio, A Obra e O Homem. Arcadia.
  • Silva, H. G. (1985). Açorianidade Na prosa de Vitorino Nemésio − Realidade, Poesia e Mito. I. N. C. M., Lisbon.
  • Roza, E. F. (2002). Poder, TradiçãO e Utopia: Nemésio e a Autonomia dos Açores. Boletim do Instuto Histórico da Ilha Terceira, Praia da Vitória.
  • Vitorino Nemésio and the Azores. Portuguese Literary & Cultural Studies. 2002. ISBN 1-933227-09-5.

References edit

  1. ^ "House-Museum Vitorino Nemésio". Explore Terceira. Retrieved 2020-11-27.
  2. ^ "Stormy Isles—An Azorean Tale | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-11-27.
  3. ^ Vitorino Nemésio and the Azores Portuguese Literary & Cultural Studies. 2002. ISBN 1-933227-09-5.

External links edit

  • - YouTube
  • Vitorino Nemésio

vitorino, nemésio, nemésio, redirects, here, people, with, spanish, given, name, nemesio, mendes, pinheiro, silva, december, 1901, praia, vitória, february, 1978, lisbon, portuguese, poet, author, intellectual, from, terceira, azores, best, known, novel, tempo. Nemesio redirects here For people with the Spanish given name see Nemesio Vitorino Nemesio Mendes Pinheiro da Silva 19 December 1901 in Praia da Vitoria 20 February 1978 in Lisbon was a Portuguese poet author and intellectual from Terceira Azores best known for his novel Mau Tempo No Canal as well as being a professor in the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon and member of the Academy of Sciences of Lisbon 1 2 Vitorino NemesioBust of the author Vitorino NemesioBornVitorino Nemesio Mendes Pinheiro da Silva19 December 1901Praia da Vitoria TerceiraDied20 February 1978 1978 02 20 aged 76 LisbonResting placeLisbonOccupationPoetLanguagePortugueseNationalityPortugueseEducationPost SecondaryAlma materUniversity of Coimbra University of LisbonPeriod1921 25 1930 34GenreFiction Romance Poetry BiographySubjectExistensialism Revolutionary Humanism Neo RealismLiterary movementRepublicanNotable worksCanto Matinal 1916 PacO de Milhafre 1924 Varanda de Pilatos 1926 Sob Os Signos de Agora 1932 A Mocidade de Herculano 1934 RelacoEs Francesas do Romantismo PortugueS 1936 O Bicho Harmonioso 1938 Eu Comovido a Oeste 1940 Mau Tempo No Canal 1944 Ondas Medias 1945 Festa Redonda 1950 Nem Toda a Noite a Vida 1953 O Segredo de Ouro Preto 1954 O PaO e a Culpa 1955 Corsario das Ilhas 1956 Conhecimento de Poesia 1958 O Verbo e a Morte 1959 Canto de Vespera 1966 Jornal do Observador 1974 Sapateia Acoriana Andamento HolandeS e Outros Poemas 1976 Notable awardsRicardo Malheiros Literary Prize 1944 National Literary Prize 1965 Montaigne Prize 1974 SpouseGabriela Monjardino de Azevedo GomesChildrenGeorgina November 1926 Jorge April 1929 Manuel July 1930 and Ana Paula At the end of 1931 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Academia 1 2 Later life 2 Public works 2 1 Poetry 2 2 Fiction 2 3 Dissertations and Critics 2 4 Chronicles 3 Bibliography 4 References 5 External linksBiography editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards No cleanup reason has been specified Please help improve this section if you can July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vitorino Nemesio was the son of Vitorino Gomes da Silva and Maria da Gloria Mendes Pinheiro and born in Praia da Vitoria on Terceira island Azores 1901 His early education did not reflect the academic career that he would have he encountered many problems as a student and was expelled from secondary school repeating his fifth year of studies Of his time in the secondary school in Angra do Heroismo Nemesio indicated his fondness for history classes and attributed this interest to Manuel Antonio Ferreira Deusdado his history teacher who introduced him to the social sciences At 16 years of age for the first time Nemesio travelled to the district capital of Horta to complete his entry exams for the National School he was barely able to accomplish a passing mark He did complete the entry exams in the General Course on 16 July 1918 His stayed in Horta from May to August 1918 On 13 August the newspaper O Telegrafo although disparagingly referring to Nemesio as a provincial published a notice about the young author s first book of poetry Canto Matinal which was sent to the editor Manuel Emidio it would later be published in 1916 While at the school he contributed to Eco Academico Semanario dos Alunos do Liceu de Angra and helped to found the magazine Estrela d Alva Revista Literaria Ilustrada e Noticiosa while completing his studies in Angra Although relatively young Nemesio had already developed republican ideals having participated in literary republican and anarchist unionist meetings while living in Angra He was influenced primarily by his friend Jaime Brasil five years his senior the first intellectual mentor he knew as well as others such as the lawyer Luis da Silva Ribeiro and the author librarian Gervasio Lima In 1918 just before the First World War ended Horta was a centre of maritime commerce with a vibrant night life It was an obligatory port of call a place for refurnishing chips and giving time off to the crew The trans Atlantic telegraph cable companies had installed themselves in Horta contributing to a cosmopolitan environment that much later would inspire his Mau Tempo no Canal on which he was to begin working after 1939 In 1919 he volunteered for military service in the infantry enabling him to travel outside the Azores for the first time 3 Academia edit In Lisbon he worked as a coordinator for A Patria A Imprensa de Lisboa and Ultima Hora while completing his secondary school studies in Coimbra in 1921 He eventually enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the University of Coimbra where he worked as an editor in the student newspaper By 1923 he joined the Coimbra Revolta Lodge of the Grand Order of Lusitania a masonic group While working for the magazine Bizancio he learnt of his father s death Three years later 1925 he switched from Law to Social and Applied Sciences in the Faculty of Letters to concentrate on the Historical and Geographic Sciences During his first trip to Spain Salamanca specifically with the Academic Choir in 1923 he met the Spanish writer philosopher and republican Miguel Unamuno 1864 1936 a leader in revolutionary humanist theory and staunch anti Francist with whom he would continue to correspond for years With Afonso Duarte Antonio de Sousa Branquinho da Fonseca Gaspar Simoes among others he founded the magazine Triptico His studies turned to Romance Languages by 1925 at the time he worked with Jose Regio Joao Gaspar Simoes and Antonio de Sousa on the journal Humanidade Quinzenario de Estudantes de Coimbra In Coimbra on 12 February 1926 he married Gabriela Monjardino de Azevedo Gomes with whom he would have four children Georgina November 1926 Jorge April 1929 Manuel July 1930 and Ana Paula at the end of 1931 In 1930 Nemesio transferred to the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon where a year later he concluded his course in Romance Languages and began offering classes in Italian Literature and later Spanish Literature after 1931 He obtained his Doctorate in 1934 from the University of Lisbon with his thesis A Mocidade de Herculano Ate a Volta do Exilio English The Youth of Herculano until His Return from Exile Between 1937 and 1939 he lectured at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles returning in the last year to the Faculty of Letters in Lisbon His most complex dense and subtle novel Mau Tempo No Canal remains one of the primary examples of contemporary Portuguese literature which he would finally publish in 1944 Encompassing the islands of Faial Pico Sao Jorge and Terceira the novel evokes the period of 1917 1919 when the author lived in Horta and where people such as Dr Jose Machado de Serpa a Republican senator Father Nunes da Rosa professor at the secondary school and Osorio Goulart poet were contemporaries After his seminal work Nemesis never returned to writing novels in an unpublished epilogue under the title Morro autor de um romance unico English I will die as the author of a single novel he stated that Mau Tempo No Canal was the high point in his long literary career On visiting Horta for a second time in 1946 he wrote Corsario das Ilhas English The Islands Corsair in which he reflected on his schooling I like Horta like loquats I long nostalgically for who I was I don t how when I was here Everything I imagined and more or less was frustrated by was here but Horta is not just going beyond Matriz on high where the homes of the nobility stood and which the Jesuits adapted and another two or three always cubical fastidious church convents on high each points when I leave to the parishes of Conceicao and Angustias it is what is needed to complete a good citizenship white as a bride Horta Thirty years later Nemesio continued to remember the village of Horta as his first refuge of patriarchal hospitality and gentility in everything or for everything In 1958 he lectured in Brazil On 12 September 1971 when he reached the public service retirement age he gave his final lecture at the Faculty in Lisbon a period of 40 years of service Later life edit He authored and presented the television program Se bem me lembro which contributed to popularising his literary importance while at the same time directing the newspaper O Dia from 11 December 1975 to 25 October 1976 He died on 20 February 1978 in Lisbon at the CUF Hospital and was laid to rest in his adopted home Coimbra Before his death he asked his son to bury him in the cemetery of Santo Antonio dos Olivais and that the bells should play the Alleluia Public works editHis early literary writings were inspired by the Azores Afonso Lopes Vireira would later note the presence of childhood memories and loves pains and figures of humility who in these pages are alive and obsessed with the sea Vitorino Nemesio s personal experiences are generally present in his published works beginning with his volume of stories in Paco do Milhafre English Eagle Palace in 1924 Prefaced by Afonso Lopes Vieira and later retitled O Misterio do Paco do Milhafre English The Mystery of Eagle Palace the work has been in print since 1949 During his long literary career the author has never stopped surprising readers In his novels for example he transmitted a sense of originality in particular with his descriptions of places and complex characters in which he was generously human such as in Varanda de Pilatos published in 1927 or his volume of novels A Casa Fechada English The Closed House comprising three stories O Tubarao English The Shark Negocio de Pomba English Dove Business and A Casa Fechada Vitorino Nemesio was one of the great writers of contemporary Portuguese literature receiving in 1965 the Premio Nacional da Literatura English National Literary Prize as well as the 1974 Montaigne Prize He was a writer of fiction and poetry a chronicler a biographer a historian of literature a journalist a philosopher a letter writer a language expert and a television writer This was ironic in view of his terrible beginnings in the secondary school on Terceira Generally regional in his perspectives his works elaborated on Azorean life along with sentimental memories of his childhood revealing a populist preoccupation with simple people who were profoundly human and living through aspects of human suffering He published biographies including his doctoral dissertation on Alexandre Herculano and his biography of Queen Saint Elizabeth of Portugal He also wrote of his journeys to Brazil the Azores and Madeira discussed diverse subjects associated with Portuguese and Brazilian history including a dissertation on Gil Vicente and wrote poetry criticism Nemesio was also a poet publish works uninterruptedly from 1916 Canto Matinal to 1976 Era do Atomo Crise do Homem oscar Lopes writing on his poetry noted two currents of verse in his work Nem toda a Noite a Vida English Not All Night Is There Life The first current is mostly regional in particular nostalagia for island life childhood adolescences his father and first forbidden love which are obvious in O Bicho Harmonioso English The Harmonious Beast and Eu Comovido a Oeste In his later works there is a transformation his themes are more metaphysical and religious in tone he debated themes of life and death of being and the search for the meaning of life purely existentialist philosophy In addition the writer cultivates a popular poetry marked by Azorean symbolism in which he was regularly accused of being a regionalist literary Poetry edit Canto Matinal 1916 O Bicho Harmonioso 1938 Eu Comovido a Oeste 1940 Festa Redonda 1950 Nem Toda a Noite a Vida 1953 O Pao e a Culpa publicada em 1955 O Verbo e a Morte 1959 Canto de Vespera 1966 Sapateia Acoriana Andamento Holandes e Outros Poemas 1976 Fiction edit Paco de Milhafre 1924 Varanda de Pilatos 1926 Mau Tempo no Canal 1944 which won the Ricardo Malheiros Literary Prize Dissertations and Critics edit Sob os Signos de Agora 1932 A Mocidade de Herculano 1934 Relacoes Francesas do Romantismo PortugueS 1936 Ondas Medias 1945 Conhecimento de Poesia 1958 Chronicles edit O Segredo de Ouro Preto 1954 Corsario das Ilhas 1956 Jornal do Observador 1974 Bibliography editGarcia J M 1978 Vitorino Nemesio A Obra e O Homem Arcadia Silva H G 1985 Acorianidade Na prosa de Vitorino Nemesio Realidade Poesia e Mito I N C M Lisbon Roza E F 2002 Poder TradicaO e Utopia Nemesio e a Autonomia dos Acores Boletim do Instuto Historico da Ilha Terceira Praia da Vitoria Vitorino Nemesio and the Azores Portuguese Literary amp Cultural Studies 2002 ISBN 1 933227 09 5 References edit House Museum Vitorino Nemesio Explore Terceira Retrieved 2020 11 27 Stormy Isles An Azorean Tale Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2020 11 27 Vitorino Nemesio and the Azores Portuguese Literary amp Cultural Studies 2002 ISBN 1 933227 09 5 External links edit YouTube Vitorino Nemesio Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vitorino Nemesio amp oldid 1170828767, 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