In recent years Pizarnik has come to be widely acknowledged as a key figure within Argentinian literature. Born Flora Alejandra Pizarnik in 1936 in a Jewish immigrant district of Buenos Aires, Pizarnik rapidly evolved a distinctive poetic persona, the so-called “personaje alejandrino” [Alejandra character] (Correspondencia Pizarnik, p. 53). This poetic self fed off her intense and eclectic reading which spanned Golden Age Spanish poetry, poètes maudits such as Baudelaire and Rimbaud, surrealism, and the tortured worlds of Artaud and Kafka. The result was an accentuation of her latent feelings of estrangement, both from her immediate social …
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Citation: Mackintosh, Fiona, Karl Posso. "Alejandra Pizarnik". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 11 March 2008 [https://staging.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=11992, accessed 25 November 2024.]