The Unknown University

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OriginaltitleLa Universidad Desconocida
TranslatorLaura Healy
LanguageSpanish, English
The Unknown University
2013 New Directions cover
AuthorRoberto Bolaño
Original titleLa Universidad Desconocida
TranslatorLaura Healy
LanguageSpanish, English
GenrePoetry
PublisherEditorial Anagrama (Spanish, 2007)
New Directions (English/Spanish bilingual, 2013)
Publication placeSpain, United States
Pages835
ISBN978-0-8112-1928-0
OCLC812781269
861/.64
LC ClassPQ8098.12.O38 A2 2013

The Unknown University is a posthumous anthology of poems by the Chilean writer Roberto Bolaño. It was first published in Spain as La Universidad Desconocida by Editorial Anagrama in 2007. A bilingual edition with English translation by Laura Healy was published by New Directions in 2013.

Several poems in the collection were originally published in English in The Believer, Boston Review, Conduit, McSweeney's, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Pleiades, Poetry, A Public Space, and The Threepenny Review.[1]

Most of the roughly 300 poems in the collection were written between 1978 and 1984, with a few dating as late as 1993.[2]

According to Bolaño's widow, Carolina López, the earliest version of the book was a 57-page manuscript found among Bolaño's papers titled The Unknown University, poems 1978-1981, seemingly assembled in 1984 or earlier. Another manuscript with the same title had 138 pages and was prepared sometime after 1985. A third and final manuscript was titled The Unknown University, definitive version (almost) 1993. This was the basis for the version published by Anagrama.[3]

A version of The Unknown University's "People Walking Away" was published in 2002 (in Spanish) and 2010 (in English) as Antwerp, translated by Natasha Wimmer; Healy adapted Wimmer's translation for the book. An earlier version of the text titled "Fragments of the Unknown University" won the 1992 Rafael Morales Prize from the government of Talavera de la Reina, Spain, Morales' hometown.

The book takes its title from one of its poems, "Between Friedrich von Hausen":

(Dear Alfred Bester, at least
I've found one of the wings
of the Unknown University!)

"The Men Who Murdered Mohammed," a 1958 story by American science fiction writer Alfred Bester, told the story of a mad scientist named Henry Hassel, a "professor of Applied Compulsion at Unknown University...Nobody knows where the Unknown University is or what they teach there. It has a faculty of some two hundred eccentrics and a student body of two thousand misfits—the kind that remain anonymous until they win Nobel Prizes or become the first man on Mars."[4][5]

Reception

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