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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Latin American Literature > Spanish American literature
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Spanish American literature, Latin American Literature

Related Category: Latin American Literature

The colonial period in Spanish American history and letters came to an end with the wars for independence in the early 19th cent. Prose writers and poets, imbued with the ideals of revolution and the nationalism of independence, expressed their thoughts in fiery prose and heroic verse. SimOn BolIvar, the Liberator, is known for his analyses of the political scene as well as for his military exploits.

The Mexican JosE JoaquIn FernAndez de Lizardi became famous as an ardent propagandist and pamphleteer. Basically a journalist, he is remembered as the author of the first Spanish American novel, The Itching Parrot (1816; tr. 1942), a work in the picaresque genre. JosE JoaquIn Olmedo celebrated the victories of BolIvar in a heroic poem in the classical style entitled La victoria de JunIn: Canto a BolIvar (1825). AndrEs Bello, the Venezuelan humanist, educator, and poet, also sang of America in his serene A Georgic of the Tropics (1826; tr. 1954).

With political independence from Spain achieved, except in the island countries of the Caribbean, cultural independence swept the region, aided by the romantic tenets of freedom, emotional intensity, and individualism. For a while, classic forms coexisted with romanticism as in the poetry of JosE MarIa Heredia of Cuba. His En el teocalli de Cholula [in the temple-pyramid of Cholula] (1820) is the first Spanish American romantic poem.

Among the early romanticists were the young intellectuals who fled from the tyranny of Juan Manuel de Rosas in Argentina. Esteban EcheverrIa expressed himself in the poetic narrative La cautiva [the captive] (1827). Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, also of Argentina, was not only the leading exponent of romanticism but also a prolific writer and educator. His Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants (1845; tr. 1960), a study of personalism in politics, is among the classics of Spanish American letters.

The emphasis on the national scene, so characteristic of romanticism, gave rise to the gaucho literature of Argentina and Uruguay, an indigenous literary genre. The gaucho, long the hero of popular tales and ballads, became the subject of some of the most original verse of the century in the poetry of Rafael Obligado, Estanislao del Campo, and in the classic MartIn Fierro (1872–79; tr. 1948) of JosE HernAndez. The romanticist's interest in the search for his native roots can be seen in the epic poem TabarE (1886; tr. 1956) of Juan Zorrilla de San MartIn, and in the historical anecdotes and sketches, the Knights of the Cape and 37 Other Selections from Tradiciones peruanas (1872–1910; tr. 1945), of Ricardo Palma.

Several novels of the period reflect the various trends in letters. Amalia (1851–55; tr. 1919), by JosE MArmol, deals with life in Argentina under Juan Manuel de Rosas; MartIn Rivas (1862; tr. 1918), by Alberto Blest Gana of Chile, depicts the life and customs of Chile; MarIa (1867; tr. 1890) is the tragic idyll of Jorge Isaacs of Colombia; and CumandA (1871), by Ecuador's Juan LeOn Mera, is a romantic portrayal of native life.

This same period produced some of Spanish America's most notable essayists. Juan Montalvo of Ecuador wielded his pen against the tyranny of GarcIa Moreno; Eugenio MarIa de Hostos of Puerto Rico championed the cause of the independence and union of the islands of the Antilles; and Manuel GonzAlez Prada of Peru attacked the entire social and economic system of his country and spoke out in defense of the indigenous peoples.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Literature and the Arts > Literature in Other Modern Languages
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