The square root of negative one:the influence of imaginary numbers on Nicanor Parra’s poem ‘El hombre imaginario’
This article presents a new and necessary explication of ‘El hombre imaginario’, the most well-known poem of Nicanor Parra, by connecting the repetition of the word imaginario, which is central to the poem, to the symbol i—the square root of negative one—used to represent imaginary numbers. In this interpretation, the poem integrates a cold, sterile element of mathematics into the artful world of antipoetry so seamlessly that this element has gone unnoticed by critics—until now. In the poem, Parra, who was well acquainted with the symbol i—something that this paper carefully proves—uses the modifiers imaginario(s)/a(s) to transpose the meaning of words much in the same way that the symbol i, the imaginary unit, transposes the meaning of numbers. Accordingly, this article attempts to reveal the hidden algebra of the poem, opening an avenue for further interpretation.
| Item Type | Working paper |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Nicanor Parra,hombre imaginario,imaginary,imaginary man,imaginary number,antipoetry,poetry,literature |
| Departments |
Centre for Economic Performance LSE |
| Date Deposited | 04 Mar 2021 00:06 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/108946 |
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