Alejandro Rossi


Alejandro Rossi was an Italian-Venezuelan writer.
Alejandro Rossi wrote philosophical essays, short stories and the following books: Lenguaje y significado ; Manual del Distraído ; Sueños de Occam ; La fábula de Las Regiones , Edén: Vida imaginada. Ortega y Gasset in collaboration ; he edited José Gaos' Anthology: Filosofía de la Filosofía . Rossi won the Premio Nacional de Lingüística y Literatura in 1999.
Rossi's writing is marked by a rich language that plays with generic definitions.

Independent and Collaborative Works

Rossi was co-founder and co-director of the Hispanic-American magazine Crítica . He was also a member of the editing board for the magazine Plural and acted as the interim director for the magazine Vuelta. In 1983, Rossi was invited to attend St. Anthony's College in University of Oxford in Great Britain. Then in 1989, Rossi edited and wrote the foreword for the anthology José Gaos: Filosofía de la Filosofía and also collaborated with various foreign others in books like Philosophie und Rechtstheorie in Mexiko and Philosophical Analysis in Latin America. Some of his other well-known works include Manual del Distraído , La Fábula de las Regiones , and Lenguaje y significado . On the same note, in a volume written in collaboration with other authors, Rossi paid homage to one of mainstays of his form of thought, José Ortega and Gasset.
In addition to his work for Plural, Rossi also wrote supplemental articles on culture for the newspaper Excélsior which, at the time, was headed by the poet Octavio Paz and under the editorship of Julio Scherer García. In 1976, the newspaper was subdued by members of the Institutional Revolutionary Party led by Luis Echeverría Álvarez -- due to the newspaper's views against his administration—leaving Rossi to follow Paz and his coworkers in founding the literary review Vuelta of which Rossi served as the interim director for a few months. From there, Rossi became part of the review's editing board until the very last day of publication. Vuelta later came to receive the Prince of Asturias Award in 1993.