Yannis Ritsos (born May 1, 1909, Monemvasia, Greece—died Nov. 11, 1990, Athens) was a popular Greek poet whose work was periodically banned for its left-wing content.
Ritsos was born into a wealthy but unfortunate family. His father died insane; his mother and a brother died of tuberculosis when he was 12. Reared by relatives, Ritsos attended Athens Law School briefly (1925), was confined to a tuberculosis sanitarium (1927–31), and in the 1930s was an actor and dancer. He joined the Greek Communist Party in 1934, the year his first collection of poems, Trakter (“Tractors”), appeared. Both it and Pyramides (1935; “Pyramids”) mixed socialist philosophy with vivid images of his personal suffering.
His next collection, Epitafios (1936; “Funeral Lament”), was symbolically burned at the foot of the Acropolis, and for nearly a decade he could not publish freely. During the Nazi occupation of Greece (1944) and the start of the civil war, Ritsos joined with the Communist guerrillas; after their defeat (1949) he was arrested and spent four years in prison camps. In the 1950s Epitafios, set to music by Mikis Theodorakis, became the anthem of the Greek left. In 1967 he was arrested and exiled, and he was prohibited from publishing until 1972. Despite the turbulence of his life, he wrote more than 100 books, including plays and essays. A collection of 17 dramatic soliloquies by mythological figures makes up Tetartē diastasē (1972; The Fourth Dimension).