Bousoño was born in Boal, Asturias in 1923. When he was two years old, his family moved to Oviedo, where he completed the first two years of a Philosophy and Arts degree. He moved to Madrid when he was 19, graduating from the Central University with the Extraordinary Prize in 1946; he completed his master's degree there in 1949, being the first to write a master's thesis about a living writer, Vicente Aleixandre. By 1950, his work La poesía de Vicente Aleixandre became widely recognised, and today it remains one of the best and deepest works about Vicente Aleixandre's poetry. From 1946-48, Bousoño traveled in Mexico and the United States, teaching literature at Wellesley College in Massachusetts before returning to Spain. On 24 October 2015, Bousoño died at the age of 92.
Poetry
Bousoño published his first book of poetry, Subida al amor, in 1945.
Academic career
His passion for poetry, along with his intelligence and curiosity, helped him make early inroads within the world of literary theory. In 1952, he published Teoría de la expresión poética, in which he analyzes the secrets of the poetic mystery. He became a renowned interpreter of Spanish literature and an influential literary critic. Bousoño taught Spanish literature at several American universities, including Wellesley, Smith, Vanderbilt, Middlebury, and New York University. He then became lecturer of Stylistics at the Complutense University of Madrid, where he remains a Professor Emeritus. Among his students of poetry who credit his teachings as influential to their careers is the Puerto Rican poet Giannina Braschi, author of "Yo-Yo Boing!" and "United States of Banana". In his book Épocas literarias y evolución, Bousoño analyzes the history of literary ages and their corresponding movements and evolution. He has also studied the evolution of metaphoric expression, from classical examples like "your hand is like the snow", to more complex surrealistic metaphors, for example: "swords like lips". In 1979, Bousoño became a member of the Royal Spanish Academy. He remained occupant of the Academy chair 'M' until his death in 2015.
Recognition
said that Bousoño was his preferred theorist in all of Europe. Spanish author and critic Luis Antonio de Villena called Bousoño "one of the most outstanding poets of the postwar generations" and "an outstanding poetry theorist, upholding the most profound sense of irrationalism and surrealism, that is, that the magic of the irrational can be understood". German-born poet Scharlie Meeuws wrote an 'Elegy on the Death of Carlos Bousoño'.