Jump to content

José García Nieto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
José García Nieto
Born(1914-07-06)6 July 1914
Oviedo, Spain
Died27 February 2001(2001-02-27) (aged 86)
Madrid, Spain
Seat i of the Real Academia Española
In office
13 March 1983 – 27 February 2001
Preceded byJosé María Pemán
Succeeded byMargarita Salas

José García Nieto (Oviedo, 6 July 1914 – Madrid, 27 February 2001) was a Spanish poet and writer. In 1996, he was awarded the Miguel de Cervantes Prize. Along with Gabriel Celaya, Blas de Otero and José Hierro, he was a member of the post-war generation of Spanish poets.

Biography

José García Nieto was born in Oviedo, on 6 July 1914, at 8, la calle Portugalete (now, 6 Melquíades Álvarez). His parents were José García Lueso and María de La Encarnación Nieto Fernández.

In 1950, he won the Premio Adonais for Dama de soledad; in 1955 he won the Premio Fastenrath awarded by the Real Academia Española for Geografía es amor.

In 1951 and 1957, he won the Premio Nacional de Literatura de España; in 1980 he won the Premio Mariano de Cavia.

García Nieto was elected to seat i of the Real Academia Española, he took up his seat on 13 March 1983.[1]

In 1987 he won Premio González-Ruano. In 1996 he won the Cervantes Prize.

Works

  • Víspera hacia ti (1940)
  • Poesía (1944)
  • Versos de un huésped de Luisa Esteban (1944)
  • Tú y yo sobre la tierra (1944)
  • Retablo de ángel, el hombre y la pastora (1944)
  • Del campo y soledad (1946)
  • Juego de los doce espejos (1951)
  • Tregua (1951). Premio Nacional de Literatura
  • La red (1955). Premio Fastenrath
  • Geografía es amor (1956). Premio Nacional de Literatura
  • El parque pequeño (1959)
  • Corpus Chisti y seis sonetos (1962)
  • Circunstancias de la muerte (1963)
  • La hora undécima (1963)
  • Memorias y compromisos (1966)
  • Hablando solo (1967). Premio Ciudad de Barcelona
  • Facultad de volver (1970)
  • Taller de arte menor y cincuenta sonetos (1973)
  • Súplica por la paz del mundo y otros "collages" (1973). Premio Boscán
  • Sonetos y revelaciones de Madrid (1974)
  • Los cristales fingidos (1978)
  • El arrabal (1980)
  • Nuevo elogio de la lengua española (1983)
  • Sonetos españoles a Bolívar (1983)
  • Donde el mundo no cesa de referir su historia (1983) -prosa-
  • Piedra y cielo de Roma (1984)
  • Carta a la madre (1988)
  • Mar viviente (1989)
  • El cuaderno roto (1989) -prosa-

See also

References

  1. ^ "José García Nieto - letra i". Real Academia Española (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 May 2023.

External links