Yolanda Oreamuno

Yolando Oreamuno Unger

Sculpture ofYolanda Oreamuno, by Marisel Jiménez, in the garden of el Teatro Nacional
Born 8 April 1916
San Jose, Costa Rica
Died 8 July 1956
Mexico City, Mexico
Nationality Costa Rica

Yolando Oreamuno Unger (8 April 1916 8 July 1956) was a Costa Rican writer. Her most acclaimed novel is La Ruta de su Evasión (1948). Her 40 years of life were markedly divided into two phases: the first 20 years, filled with youth, beauty and happiness, contrasted sharply with the following years of tragedy, loneliness and sickness.

Early life

Yolanda Oreamuno was the only child of Carlos Oreamuno Pacheco and Margarita Unger Salazar. Her father died before her first birthday, so she was mainly raised by her maternal grandmother, Eudoxia Salazar Salazar, whose husband Unger was deceased by then.[1] She obtained her secondary education in the Colegio Superior de Señoritas. She then studied bookkeeping and worked at the Costa Rican Post Office headquarters.

At age 20 she published her first two stories, La lagartija de la panza blanca, and Para Revenar, no para Max Jiménez.

Marriage and adult life

She was working in the Chilean embassy when she met the diplomat Jorge Molina Wood. They were married, and moved to the eastern part of that country. She recounted life during that time in her stories La mareas vuelven de noche and Don Junvencio (which remained unpublished until 1971). Her time in Chile was prolific; her stories appeared in Repertorio Americano, including 40º sobre cero, 18 de setiembre, Misa de ocho, Vela urbana, El espíritu de mi tierra, Insomnio and El negro, sentido de la alegría.

fell apart in 1936; her husband, weakened by an incurable disease, committed suicide. She returned to Costa Rica at the end of 1936.

In 1937 she married a lawyer, Óscar Barahona Streber, who was involved with the Costa Rican communist movement. They both participated in opposition activities. Their son, Sergio Barahona Oreamuno, was born 8 December 1942. Their marriage did not last; after their divorce, her ex-husband migrated to Guatemala.

She wrote her first novel, Por tierra firme, in 1938. In 1940 she submitted it to a writing contest, winning a three-way first prize. However, she declined to share the honor with the others, and decided against sending the manuscript for publication; eventually the manuscript was lost.

Oreamuno'tomb. The epitaph reads "Tal vez solo a la muerte se llega demasiado temprano" (perhaps only in death was she too early)

Oreamuno moved to Mexico, then decided to become a permanent Guatemalan citizen. However, by 1949 she was gravely ill, and she dwelt four months in a Washington D. C. hospital. She left the hospital to travel to Mexico City, to stay in the house of Costa Rican poet Eunice Odio. She died there in 1956. She was buried in a mausoleum in San Joaquín, D.F. In 1963 her remains were moved to San José.[2] On the 55th anniversary of her death (8 July 2011), a commemorative plaque was installed over her tomb.[3]

Literary work

Novels

Other works

Stories or articles published

Evaluation of her work

Her most renowned novel is La Ruta de su Evasión (1948). Oreamuno draws on narrative techniques that were uncommon in other Costa Rican writers. It is believed that authors like Thomas Mann and Marcel Proust influenced her literary creation. Costa Rican critic Abelardo Bonilla wrote that "In this as in all works of Yolanda Oreamuno there is boldness of conception and form, but there is a lack of internal unity".[6]

References

  1. Spanish American Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Source Book, Diane E. Marting (Editor), Greenwood Press, 1990.
  2. Armando G. Tejeda. La libertad de la mujer, “motor vital” de la nueva novela de Sergio Ramírez, La Jornada (13 April 2011)
  3. J. P. Morales. Lo que dije el ocho, develando la placa de Y.O., Miasfera, (10 July 2011)
  4. Ficha de La ruta de su evasión Archived June 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine., Editorial Costa Rica
  5. Ficha de A lo largo del corto camino Archived June 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine., Editorial Costa Rica
  6. Bonilla, Abelardo. (1971). Historia de la literatura costarricense, Editorial STVDIUM, San José, San José, Costa Rica: p. 329
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