Immediate Support: 1-203-874-5641 

local_florist
Pencils-213
Welcome to the memorial page for

Gregory L Rabassa

March 9, 1922 ~ June 13, 2016 (age 94) 94 Years Old
Obituary Image

Dr.  Gregory Rabassa, renowned teacher, scholar, and translator, died June 13, 2016 in Branford, CT.  He was 94. Dr. Rabassa was born March 9, 1922 in Yonkers, NY to Clara Macfarland, of NY, and Mr. Miguel Rabassa, of Cienfuegos, Cuba.  He grew up in Hanover, NH, where his parents operated a popular inn known as the Villaclara Farm. Graduating from Hanover HS in 1940, he attended Dartmouth College.  When the United States entered World War II, Dr. Rabassa, still in college, volunteered for the Enlisted Reserve Corps.  Called up before he could graduate, Dr. Rabassa, who had taken his comprehensive examinations in Romance Languages, was six points short of graduation.  It was while he was involved with the Fifth Army in the European campaign that, much to his surprise, Dr. Rabassa received his diploma in the mail.  Dartmouth officials, he was pleased to learn, had determined that his Army service had provided him with sufficient physical education training to gain him the needed three points in that area and that his participation in the war effort, in North Africa and Italy, had given him the also needed three points in modern European history, which Dr. Rabassa, with characteristic wit, would later say that he was not only studying but helping to make.  A decorated veteran with a rank of Staff Sergeant of Infantry, Dr. Rabassa took great pride in his military service and in his decoding, encryption, and cipher work with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).  It was while serving in Caserta, Italy, and doing this kind of work, that Dr. Rabassa felt he received his earliest lessons in the art of translation. In 1945, Dr. Rabassa enrolled at Columbia University as a graduate student in Spanish, later, Dr. Rabassa would receive his Ph.D., in Portuguese and Luso-Brazilian literature, in 1954.  Dr. Rabassa was invited to stay on in the Columbia system, teaching Spanish at Columbia College, honing his Portuguese, and also attending Columbia University seminars on James Joyce (where he studied with William York Tindall and from which he gained a lifelong love of Joyce and his work, especially Finnegans Wake) and classes offered by the German, Italian, and French programs.  Part of his assignment at Columbia College was teaching in the Great Books program, which he thoroughly enjoyed and which allowed him to develop his love of Shakespeare and Faulkner.   Dr. Rabassa stayed on at Columbia until 1969, when, having been offered a position as Professor of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature, he left to join the faculty at Queens College and the City University of New York Graduate Center.  He held this position until his retirement as Distinguished Professor of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature. Dr. Rabassa was widely known as “the translator’s translator.”  Publisher Alfred A. Knopf once dubbed Dr. Rabassa the “Pope of translation.” For William Kennedy, Rabassa ranked as one of the greatest translators “who ever drew breath.”  It was through his translations that Dr. Rabassa would become the writer he had always wanted to be.   Gabriel García Márquez, the author of One Hundred Years of Solitude (a novel that Dr. Rabassa also translated), once described Dr. Rabassa as “The best Latin American writer working in the English language.” Dr. Rabassa’s many awards include the National Medal of Arts, New York Public Library Literary Lion, PEN/Ralph Manheim Medal, PEN/Martha Albrand Medal, PEN/Gregory Kolovakos Award, American Academy of Arts and Letters Literature Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Brazilian Studies Association Lifetime Achievement Award. Outside of the literary world, he had a love for nature.  Whether it was bird watching, hiking, or observing a particular bird or tree while out on a walk, he thrived on it.  He spent many years in Hampton Bays, NY, enjoying the wildlife of the area.  He was also an avid stamp collector.  He is survived by his wife, Clementine, daughters Kate Rabassa Wallen and Clara Rabassa, and granddaughters Jennifer Wallen and Sarah Wallen. Donations in his memory may be made to the OSS Society and Dartmouth College. Services will be held in private. To share a memory, please visit www.gregoryfdoylefuneralhome.com Arrangements have been entrusted with the Gregory F. Doyle Funeral Home, 291 Bridgeport Avenue, Milford, CT 06460.


 Service Information

A service summary is not available


© 2024 Gregory F. Doyle Funeral Home. All Rights Reserved. Funeral Home website by CFS & TA | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Accessibility