Luis Rosales
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Luis Rosales Camacho (31 May 1910 – 24 October 1992) was a Spanish poet and essay writer member of the Generation of '36. He was born in
Granada Granada (,, DIN: ; grc, Ἐλιβύργη, Elibýrgē; la, Illiberis or . ) is the capital city of the province of Granada, in the autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain. Granada is located at the foot of the Sierra Nevada mountains, at the c ...
(Spain). He became a member of the
Hispanic Society of America The Hispanic Society of America operates a museum and reference library for the study of the arts and cultures of Spain and Portugal and their former colonies in Latin America, the Spanish East Indies, and Portuguese India. Despite the name, i ...
and the
Royal Spanish Academy The Royal Spanish Academy ( es, Real Academia Española, generally abbreviated as RAE) is Spain's official royal institution with a mission to ensure the stability of the Spanish language. It is based in Madrid, Spain, and is affiliated with ...
in 1962. Rosales obtained the
Miguel de Cervantes Prize The Miguel de Cervantes Prize ( es, Premio de Literatura en Lengua Castellana Miguel de Cervantes) is awarded annually to honour the lifetime achievement of an outstanding writer in the Spanish language. History The prize was established in 1975 ...
in 1982 for his literary work. He died in
Madrid Madrid ( , ) is the capital and most populous city of Spain. The city has almost 3.4 million inhabitants and a metropolitan area population of approximately 6.7 million. It is the second-largest city in the European Union (EU), and ...
in 1992, aged 82.


Biography

He was born in Granada in 1910, into a very conservative family. His beginnings in literary training are related to the environment of artists from the ''Gallo'' magazine (although he never published in it), whose members —Enrique Gómez Arboleya, Manuel López Banús, Joaquín Amigo and
Federico García Lorca Federico del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús García Lorca (5 June 1898 – 19 August 1936), known as Federico García Lorca ( ), was a Spanish poet, playwright, and theatre director. García Lorca achieved international recognition as an emblemat ...
, among others—, will become his great friends. In 1930, after a couple of publications in the avant-garde magazine ''Granada Gráfica'', he made his first poetic reading at the Granada Artistic, Literary and Scientific Center, which was considered a success - the Granada press echoed, and since then his interventions in this institution were numerous—; months later, he began his studies in Philosophy and Law at the
University of Granada The University of Granada ( es, Universidad de Granada, UGR) is a public university located in the city of Granada, Spain, and founded in 1531 by Emperor Charles V. With more than 60,000 students, it is the fourth largest university in Spain. Ap ...
. In 1932 he moved to Madrid to continue his studies in Philology, obtaining a doctorate. There he began his friendship with Pedro Salinas and Jorge Guillén, who introduced him to ''Los Cuatro Vientos'', considered the last collective magazine of the group of poets of the
Generation of '27 The Generation of '27 ( es, Generación del 27) was an influential group of poets that arose in Spanish literary circles between 1923 and 1927, essentially out of a shared desire to experience and work with avant-garde forms of art and poetry. ...
. In the second number of said magazine, in April 1933, they collaborate the great intellectuals of the time such as Miguel de Unamuno, Benjamín Jarnés, Manuel Altolaguirre, María Zambrano, Luis Felipe Vivanco, Leopoldo Vivanco, Claudio de la Torre, Vicente Aleixandre, Antonio Marichalar, Jaime Torres Bodet and Rainer María Rilke; and Rosales himself publishes his first poems: ''Eclogue of sleep'' and ''Ode of anxiety''. He continued his literary activity in ''Cruz y Raya'', a magazine directed by
José Bergamín José Bergamín Gutiérrez ( Madrid, 1895 – Hondarribia, 28 August 1983) was a Spanish writer, essayist, poet, and playwright. His father served as president of the canton of Málaga; his mother was a Catholic. Bergamín was influenced by both ...
. He also publishes his verses in ''Vértice'' and ''Caballo Verde para la Poesía'', a magazine directed by Pablo Neruda in which poems by other writers such as Vicente Aleixandre or
Miguel Hernández Miguel Hernández Gilabert (30 October 1910 – 28 March 1942 ) was a 20th-century Spanish-language poet and playwright associated with the Generation of '27 and the Generation of '36 movements. Born and raised in a family of low resources, h ...
also appeared. In the capital of Spain he met the Panero (Juan and Leopoldo) and Luis Felipe Vivanco, companions of what will later be called Generation of 36 (or of the War), of which Dionisio Ridruejo is also a part, and whose common axes, In addition to his affinity and camaraderie, were his intimate Catholicism and his social conservatism. In August 1936, at the start of the
Spanish civil war The Spanish Civil War ( es, Guerra Civil Española)) or The Revolution ( es, La Revolución, link=no) among Nationalists, the Fourth Carlist War ( es, Cuarta Guerra Carlista, link=no) among Carlism, Carlists, and The Rebellion ( es, La Rebeli ...
,
Ramón Ruiz Alonso Ramón Ruiz Alonso (1903–1982) was a Spanish politician who was a right-wing activist during the Second Spanish Republic and typographer by trade. Married to actress Magdalena Penella, they had four daughters: Terele Pávez (1939–2017), Ju ...
, who was a member of the CEDA, arrested Federico García Lorca. The poet had taken refuge in the Rosales house, thus believing that he was safe from reprisals, since there were prominent Falangist members in that family. Luis Rosales could not avoid his arrest and subsequent execution despite the friendship he had with Lorca and his position within the Granada right wing. In that same fateful year, Joaquín Amigo, professor of philosophy and member of the intellectuals who created Gallo magazine and very close to both, was also assassinated. In this case, Joaquín Amigo was assassinated by the Republicans, throwing him down the Tajo de Ronda, while he was stationed in that Malaga town as a high school professor. These two deaths mark the life, both personal and literary, of Rosales, in whose work —both in ''A face in each wave'' and in his unfinished ''New York after death'', and in many other writings, both poetic and essays— are reflected the influences of both friends. In 1937 he published in the newspaper ''Patria ''de Granada, the poem «The voice of the dead», probably one of the most important written during the civil war, it chose all the victims of both sides, in which any expression of triumphalism is excluded or exaltation. From that same year Rosales collaborated in the Falangist magazine ''Jerarquía''. He also collaborated in the newspaper ''Arriba España'' and in the ''Escorial magazine''. He was editorial secretary and director of ''Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos''. Starting in 1978, he directed ''Nueva Estafeta'', the only magazine of its time because it included among its collaborations works written in the different languages of Spain (Spanish, Catalan, Basque or Galician). Ideologically, he evolved from the authoritarian ideas of his youth to democratic positions in his maturity.
Pablo Neruda Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto (12 July 1904 – 23 September 1973), better known by his pen name and, later, legal name Pablo Neruda (; ), was a Chilean poet-diplomat and politician who won the 1971 Nobel Prize in Literature. Nerud ...
said of him: At the end of 1949 and the beginning of 1950, he participated in the "poetic mission" with the poets Antonio Zubiaurre, Leopoldo Panero and the ambassador Agustín de Foxá, who toured different Hispanic American countries (among others Honduras) prior to the reestablishment of diplomatic relations between these countries and the Franco regime. In 1962 he joined the Hispanic Society of America and the Royal Spanish Academy, although he did not read his entrance speech, ''Pasión y muerte del Conde de Villamediana'', until 1964. He was an active member of the Privy Council of the Count of Barcelona, encouraging the left and right to join and support the restoration of the monarchy in Spain (first with the aforementioned, and later with Juan Carlos de Borbón). Although he had lived in Madrid since 1968, he spent summers in
Cercedilla Cercedilla () is a municipality in the Community of Madrid, in central Spain. It is located in the Sierra de Guadarrama. Background It was the hometown of Francisco Fernández Ochoa (1950–2006), an alpine ski racer known for being the first ...
, a time when he wrote his poetry books. In 1982 he received the
Cervantes Prize The Miguel de Cervantes Prize ( es, Premio de Literatura en Lengua Castellana Miguel de Cervantes) is awarded annually to honour the lifetime achievement of an outstanding writer in the Spanish language. History The prize was established in 1975 ...
, the most important literary award in the Spanish language. In 1970 he was appointed advisor to the director of the Institute of Hispanic Culture and in 1973, director of the Department of Cultural Activities of said Institute. Between 1986 and 1992 he collaborated periodically with the newspaper ABC, either writing in a column or publishing in the weekly supplement ''Blanco y Negro''. The subjects of the writings in this medium were mainly music, painting and literature. His contributions included "The originality of the second part of Don Quixote", "A model of theater", "History of a sonnet" (written in different parts), "The book of sparrows", "Rafael Alberti or freedom poetics "," The temporality of Antonio Machado "," The hour of cubism "," Creative contemplation "(about Picasso) and" The wound of cante jondo ", among many others. On October 28, 1988, in the Hall of Mirrors of the Malaga City Council, he gave the lecture «And suddenly, Picasso». He died at the age of 82 on October 24, 1992 in the old Puerta de Hierro clinic in Madrid after suffering a cerebral embolism.


Work

Abril (1935), published immediately before the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, connects with the style of poetry of the previous generation due to its aesthetic search and the importance of images, although without avant-garde pretensions. Like some poets from '27, there is in this youth work a taste for classical stanzas and, in general, for poetry from the Golden Age, specifically Garcilaso and Herrera. However, its main innovation is the combination of the love-religious theme. His next work, The best queen of Spain. Figuration in prose and verse (1939), written in collaboration with L.F. Vivanco, is an essay with a theme very typical of the time, imbued by the Falangist ideology and recalling past glories. In 1941 the content of the heart appeared, with a classic and loving tone. In 1949 he published the first version of La casa encendida, considered by critics his best work. The book was remade and expanded until a new version was produced, published in 1967. Something similar happened with his first work, Abril, which was corrected and augmented with new poems and published again in 1972 with the title Segundo Abril, almost 40 years after its first edition. La casa encendida is a book-poem –written in free verse without stanzas– where Rosales mixes lyricism and narration, existentialism and imagination, rationality and irrationality, starting a new personal poetics that incorporates resources from César Vallejo and Antonio Machado. Between 1937 and 1951 she worked on the book Rimas (1951), where she explored with the short poem, demonstrating her great versatility and technical mastery. Her essays include Cervantes y la libertad (1960) and Pasión y muerte del Conde de Villamediana (1962). Her latest works, more autobiographical and disillusioned, maintain the union of the lyrical and the narrative, with surrealist findings already present in La casa encendida. In 1966 he published The Feeling of Disappointment in Baroque Poetry, and three years later The Content of the Heart, for which in 1970 he obtained the Critics' Prize. In 1972 he published Theory of Freedom and Spanish Lyric, whose essay Garcilaso, Camoens and the Spanish Lyric of the Golden Age obtained the Miguel de Unamuno Prize.10 In 1973 the Great Illustrated Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Reader's Digest was published in eight volumes, whose group of Spanish collaborators directed and that had a second later edition in twelve volumes. Editorial Trotta has published his Complete Work in six volumes, and Félix Grande, who was a disciple and friend of Rosales, prepared the anthology Because death does not interrupt anything, with his selection and prologue, which appeared in the Biblioteca Sibila in 2010. Grande He also wrote the essay La calumnia. On how Luis Rosales, for defending Federico García Lorca, was persecuted to death (Mondadori, 1987) With the Luis García Montero Edition, the Visor de Poesía Collection publishes El naufrago metódico, Antología, Madrid, 2005.


Poetic style

The work of Luis Rosales, which covers the entire postwar historical period, evolved from a classicism to a style of its own close to the surrealist avant-garde. Two stages are usually distinguished in his work, one more concerned with aesthetic issues, close to Garcilasista classicism, and a later one of avant-garde experimentation. Both merge in La casa encendida, where aesthetics are no longer a concern, but the exercise of techniques that he already masters. Broadly speaking, Rosales's literary style is characterized by: * Mastery of poetic technique. * The construction of the poem under presuppositions of spiritual and sentimental simplicity. * Mastery and ease of use of rhymed or free verse, as appropriate to the tone of the poem or the subject matter. * The absence of adjectives, highlighting the substance of things. Regarding content, Rosales's poetry has been spoken of as the "poetry of the everyday." Love appears in all his work in a calm and calm way, as well as memory and recollection. The postwar period is also characterized by religious sentiment.


Literary awards

* National Poetry Prize 1951 * Mariano de Cavia Award 1962 * Critics Award 1970 for The Content of the Heart * Miguel de Unamuno Award 1972 * National Essay Award 1973 * José Lacalle Award 1975 * City of Melilla International Poetry Prize 1981 * Fray Luis de León-Ciudad de Salamanca 1982 Chair of Poetry Award *
Miguel de Cervantes Prize The Miguel de Cervantes Prize ( es, Premio de Literatura en Lengua Castellana Miguel de Cervantes) is awarded annually to honour the lifetime achievement of an outstanding writer in the Spanish language. History The prize was established in 1975 ...
1982 * Medal of honor from the Rodríguez Acosta Foundation (1986)


Complete literary work

Editorial Trotta published his ''Complete Works'' (Obra Completa): #''Poesía'' #''Cervantes y la libertad'' #''Estudios sobre el Barroco'' #''Ensayos de filosofía y literatura'' #''La obra poética del conde de Salinas'' #''La mirada creadora. Pintura, música y otros temas''


References


External links


The Hispanic Society of AmericaProfile on the Royal Spanish Academy
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rosales, Luis 1910 births 1992 deaths People from Granada 20th-century Spanish poets 20th-century male writers Writers from Andalusia Falangism Members of the Royal Spanish Academy Premio Cervantes winners Spanish Falangists Spanish people of the Spanish Civil War (National faction)