Showing posts with label surrealism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surrealism. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Latin America: 20th century poetry (Modernismo - Vanguardia)



MODERNISM
Origins
-          Started roughly in 1880s – various poets went into individually, mass entrance into more experimental form
-          First movement that is purely Latin American (although with European influence)
-          Influenced by Parnassianism & Symbolism (France)
Context
-          Written expression of the spiritual and literary crisis at the end of the 19th century
-          Centered on POETRY, but there are other works that are influenced by modernist ideals (ex: Ariel [Rodó, 1900] and De sobremesa [Silva, 1926])
Characteristics
-          Themes
o   Themes of modernism focus on loneliness, sensuality, love, eroticism, all of which are expressed in the idealization (and objectification) of women – women are seen as objects of beauty
o   Openness to sexuality and eroticism
o   Fascination with the exotic (lingering romantic influence?)
-          Techniques
o   Symbolism
o   Experimental: play with form and word connotations
o   Idea of language as a tool
o   Use of a sonorous, musical language (remember: beauty!)
o   References to the exotic
o   Frequent imagery (swans, superficially beautiful aspects of nature)
-          Beliefs / ideals
o   Spiritual tendency (questioning the idea of a God that they don’t quite believe in but also can’t let go of)
o   Search for [superficial] beauty (aesthetic movement, for the most part)
o   Elitist
-          Escapist literature
o   Interest in the exotic
o   Very cosmopolitan, rather than regional – not generally unique/specific to the Latin American condition
Poets:
-          Manuel Gutiérrez Nájera (México)
o   Heavy French influence, was an early part of / precursor to modernist movement
o   “Para entonces” – talks about the way he wants to die, alone, surrounded by nature’s beauty
§  Romantic influence: Somewhat darker theme, idea of death alone
§  Modernist influence: importance of beauty
o   “La duquesa Job” – describes a beautiful woman
§  Modernism: idealization and objectification of woman as object of beauty, beauty according to European standards (exoticism/escapism)
-          Julián de Casal (Cuba)
o   Heavy French influence, was an early part of / precursor to modernist movement
o   Often very dark style and themes
o   “A la belleza” – describes poet’s endless (and fruitless) search for beauty
§  Modernist influence: search for beauty, focus on beauty
§  “Yo sé que eres más blanca que los cisnes”

-          Ruben Darío (Nicaragua)
o   Considered the “father” of modernism (because he put a name to the movement)
o   “Era un aire suave” (Prosas profanas)
§  This poem is representative of Darío’s earlier modernism
§  Summary: The poem starts with a very vague sense of what’s going on, we gradually find out more (there are people there, Eulalia is one of them) and eventually learn that it’s a night at a party in 18th century France, where the marquess Eulalia is flirting with men and seducing them with her laughter.
§  Modernism: decadent imagery (reminiscent of parnassianism), symbolic use of colors, musicality, idealized/superficial vision of woman
o   “Yo soy aquel…” (Cantos)
§  Darío’s later modernism
§  Summary: First half is voice of younger Darío, talking about how he used to write, with metaphor of garden. Second half indicates changes in style, evolution, with metaphor of jungle and emphasis on artistic passion.
§  Modernism: interest in how to write and role of poet, sensuality (appeals to senses), imagery (swan), equal half-and-half split (desire for balance/equilibrium)
o   “A Roosevelt” (Cantos)
§  Later modernism, political influence (written after U.S. takes over Panama Canal)
§  Criticism of U.S. (reminiscent of Rodó’s Ariel)
-          José Martí (Cuba)
o   “Si ves un monte de espuma” (Versos sencillos)
§  Summary: If you see a mountain of foam, you are seeing my verse. It’s brief and sincere.
§  Modernism: explores role of poet and how you should write poetry
o   “Mis versos” (Introduction) (Versos libres)
§  Summary: Speaks of his inspiration as a poet. Says that his verses come from the heart, that they’re expressions of his feelings and emotions (not calculated).
§  Modernism: explores role of poet and how you should write poetry


VANGUARDIA / AVANT-GARDE (Creationism, Surrealism, Negrismo)
Origins
-          After modernism started to fizzle out, early 20th century
-          Influenced by a variety of French/European movements (especially surrealism)

Context
-          Modernismo had been a renovation of poetic form and techniques, extending to the use of free verse. But, on the whole, the experiments remained within accepted and traditional prosodic molds. The vanguardia, on the other hand, instituted a radical search for new, daring, confrontational themes and shockingly novel forms.
-          Tons of little movements (all the –isms) ----- very hybrid form, focus on experimentation and pushing the limits

Creationism (Huidobro)
-          Origins: ~1912-1916; French influence, pretty much only Huidobro
-          Characteristics
o   Play with connotations and polysemy (plurality of meaning)
o   Requires very active reader
o   Internal logic – autonomy (freedom, independent stance) of literary work [“la obra tiene en sí su propia razón para ser”]
o   “concretar lo abstracto o abstraer lo concreto”
o   Criticism of institutions (such as traditional poetry, religious beliefs, etc.) and of morals and logic of conventional society – idea that the human being as an individual creates/directs his own life rather than  having to be guided by institutional authorities (such as Christian God)
o   Typographical disposition of the words
o   Use of neologisms (new, invented words)
-          Altazor (1931)

Surrealism
-          Origins: France (André Breton’s manifestos in 1924 and 1930)
-          Characteristics:
o   Exploration of dreams and memory
o   Exploration of subconscious (conscious vs. subconscious, reality vs. dream)
o   Creation of alternative reality (“surreality”)
-          Prose examples:
o   María Luisa Bombal (La última niebla – 1935, “El árbol” – 1939)
o   Cortázar (1950s)
-          César Vallejo (Perú) – Trilce (1922)
o   “XVIII” – “Oh las cuatro paredes de la celda” 
-          Pablo Neruda (Chile) – was influenced by surrealism at some points

Negrismo
-          Nicolás Guillén (Cuba) – Sóngoro cosongo (1931), West Indies, Ltd. (1934)
o   Known for negrismo (imitation of African dialect)
o   “Mi chiquita”
§  Summary: Poetic yo praises his girlfriend/wife in somewhat machista way. Imitates “black” colloquial language.
§  Interest in African culture and orality


MISCELLANEOUS POETS OF AVANT-GARDE AND 20TH CENTURY IN GENERAL
-          Delmira Agustini (Uruguay, 1886-1914)
o   Influenced by both modernism and romanticism
o   “El intruso”
§  Summary: poem about relationship with her lover, very happy
§  Romanticism: emotional, passionate, nighttime setting (the night was tragic before you arrived)
§  Modernism: eroticism, sensuality, some experimentation with imagery/description (“tu olor de primavera”
o   “Las alas”
§  Summary: Memory of when she had wings and was surrounded by beauty, but when she awoke her wings were gone.
§  Romanticism: negativity (wings disappeared)
§  Modernism: somewhat experimental, reminiscent of surrealism in the play with dream vs. reality
-          Alfonsina Storni (Argentina, 1892-1938)
o   Influenced by both modernism and vanguardia
o   Some feminist themes in her poetry

-          César Vallejo (Perú) – “Los heraldos negros” (1918)
o   Summary: Laments the tough aspects of life, pondering if they are due to God’s hatred
o   Demonstrates romantic and modernist influence
§  Romantic: negativity, dramatic, pessimistic, emphasis on the voice of the “yo”
§  Modernist: some experimentation with form
-          Gabriela Mistral (Chile, 1889-1957)
o   Frequent theme of love, idea of both pleasure and pain inherent in love
o   Also theme of death (“Sonetos de la muerte”, “La desvelada”)
-          Pablo Neruda (Chile, 1904-1973)
o   Various stages in his poetry
§  La influencia modernista y una actitud neo-romántica
·         Musicalidad y sencillez con la expresión de los sentimientos
§  Influencia del surrealismo
§  La vanguardia (pero más española)
§  El regreso al intimismo
o   “Poema 20” (1924)
§  Summary: has lost a woman’s love
Play with temporality, idealization of the

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Maria Luisa Bombal (1935, 1939)



Sobre la autora
-          Chile, 1910-1980
-          Part of the higher social class
-          Was not an extensive writer, but wrote powerfully in the few works she published
-          Themes of eroticism, surrealism, and feminism (not exactly a feminist, but wrote about female concerns)
-          She was one of the first prose writers in Chile to break away from the realist movement (Langowski)

Comps Example Question
The historical vanguards (especially surrealismo, negrismo, and creacionismo) and their impact on modern narrative, poetry, and theater. Authors: Bombal, Huidobro, as well as periods of Vallejo and Neruda; Guillén. Some suggested readings: Unruh, Osorio, Nelson, Verani, Videla de Rivero.


La última niebla (1935)
Summary

Resumen de la obra (Langowski, pg. 47)
“El argumento de La última niebla es bastante sencillo. Una mujer joven y bella se casa con Daniel, también joven y recientemente enviudado. Se describe a Daniel como una persona que no puede olvidar el amor que sentía por su primera esposa. Esta situación peculiar presenta un problema. Por ejemplo, no puede consumar su segundo matrimonio ni mostrar afecto mínimo hacia su nueva esposa. En cambio, se pinta a ésta como mujer extremadamente deseosa de placer sexual, que llega a un estado de perturbación excesiva por falta de atención. Al fin, inventa un amorío ilícito, que ella llega a creer hecho real. Pasa su vida en constante anticipación de la vuelta de su amante. Con el correr de los años, se da cuenta de que todo ha sido una ilusión, y trata de suicidarse echándose delante de un automóvil. Daniel le salva la vida creyendo que ella se había distraído momentáneamente. La novela termina con la implicación de que la mujer tendrá que enfrentarse con la realidad sin la ayuda de su antigua existencia ilusoria.”

Characters
-          Protagonist/narrator – unnamed young woman, married to Daniel
-          Daniel – husband (and cousin) of narrator, aloof and neglectful
-          Felipe – Daniel’s brother, Regina’s husband
-          Regina – Felipe’s wife, Daniel’s sister-in law

Themes/ideas
-          Estilo de escritura
o   First person
o   Present tense
-          Style
o   Very strong language – evocative
-          Surrealist influence
o   Conscious vs. subconscious worlds
o   Fantasy/dream
o   Use of evocative language
-          Gender, female perspective
o   Failed marriage
-          Symbolism
o   Mist (niebla, neblina)
§  Adds to blur between reality and dream
o   Water
§  The pond
-          Use of silence
o   In her marriage
o   Between protagonist and her imagined lover
-          Desire (sexual)
o   Is a key factor in the invention of this imaginary lover

Notes from text
-          Protagonist and Daniel arrive at his house after having gotten married that morning (15)
o   He hasn’t told his servants that he was getting married
o   His first wife, who he was very in love with, died 9 months ago (after they had been married 3 months)
-          Daniel is somewhat passive-aggressive with protagonist; says he knows her “too well,” doesn’t even need to get her naked because he already knows what she looks like (15)
-          Change in Daniel after his first wife’s death – fear of being alone (16)
-          Daniel says protagonist is lucky to have married him – idea that she had no other options (16)
o   “¿Te hubiera gustado ser una solterona arrugada, que teje para los pobres de la hacienda?”
-          Daniel starts to cry when he enters the bedroom with the protagonist for the first time, remembering his ex-wife. Protagonist doesn’t know what to do; they don’t consummate their marriage (16-17)
-          Funeral of a young girl that has died (17)
o   Reflection on the word “silence”
o   First view of a mist
-          Protagonist’s fear at the mist (18)
o   “Y porque me ataca por vez primera, reacciono violentamente contra el asalto de la niebla”
-          Idea of a forgotten dream (18)
-          Daniel’s brother Felipe has arrived with his wife Regina to visit them with another man (18)
o   Protagonist sees Regina in embrace with different man
o   Protagonist is jealous of relationship between Regina and her lover (the other man)
-          “Mi peinado se me antojaba, entonces, un casco guerrero que, estoy segura, hubiera gustado al amante de Regina. Mi marido me ha obligado después a recoger mis extravagantes cabellos; porque en todo debo esforzarme en imitar a su primera mujer, a su primera mujer que, según él, era una mujer perfecta” (18).
-          Protagonist has some major lust going on – wants to get laid! She gets naked and goes swimming in the pond, and admires her own body (19)
-          The men go out hunting for the day, protagonist is left alone in silence with Regina (20)
o   Protagonist has a little moment with Regina’s lover when the men return (21)
-          The whole family goes to the city – visit Daniel’s mother (22)
-          While in the city, the protagonist goes out on a walk one night when she can’t sleep, and this is when she meets her “lover” (22-25)
o   Reflects on boring routine of her marriage… “will always be the same until I’m old and wrinkly”
o   Feeling of inability to escape – “La muerte me parece una aventura más accesible que la huida” (23)
o   Meets a man (“un desconocido” à “mi amigo”), who takes her to a house, where they have sex (23-25)
§  Silence – they don’t say anything
§  “casi sin tocarme” (24)
§  Sense of satisfaction in being appreciated for her beauty
-          Years pass; protagonist watches her body age. Tries to think it doesn’t matter since her body knew love once (26)
-          “Noche a noche, Daniel se duerme a mi lado, indiferente como un hermano. Lo abrigo con indulgencia porque hace años, toda una larga noche, he vivido del calor de otro hombre” (26)
-          “Mi amor por ‘él’ es tan grande que está por encima del dolor de la ausencia. Me basta saber que existe, que siente y recuerda en algún rincón del mundo…” (27)
-          Ten year wedding anniversary (28)
-          Protagonist sees her lover again, while swimming in the pond… she shouts to the servant boy Andrés, who says that he has seen the man pass and smile at her as well (28-29)
-          Protagonist shouts out to lover in the woods and imagines that she hears his response (30)
-          “Hacía años que Daniel no me besaba” (31) – but they have sex one day; he sees his ex-wife in her
o   “encontrando siempre el recuerdo de la muerta entre él y yo”
o   “Me sentía sin valor para morir, sin valor para vivir”
o   Protagonist feels that she has betrayed her lover by having sex with Daniel
-          Protagonist finds some happiness during the summer now that she and Daniel are having sex again (32-33)
-          Protagonist wants to go out walking one night, and husband Daniel says she’s crazy – protagonist reminds him that she did it once before (several years ago) and he denies it… she begins to doubt the existence of her lover (34)
-          Protagonist wants servant Andrés to confirm the existence of her lover since he supposedly saw him one day – but  when she looks for him, Andrés has suddenly died (35)
-          “Mi amante es para mí más que un amor, es mi razón de ser, mi ayer, mi hoy, mi mañana" (37)
-          Some accident – Regina is dying and they have to go to the city. Regina has shot herself in her lover’s house, but isn’t dead yet. (37-39)
-          In the city, protagonist goes looking for the place where she met her lover but can’t find it… she suddenly thinks she has found the house they went to, but they tell her the man of the house there died more than 15 years ago (40-41)
-          Regina in the hospital… protagonist is jealous of her for the strong reality of her situation, rather than the protagonist’s own doubts and insecurities (42)
-          Protagonist considers suicide, but thinks it’s worthless since she’s already so old and ugly (43)
-          The idea of the absolute flatness of protagonist’s future – no hope for anything better (44)

General Ideas (from class)
-          Idea of the perfect bride as a dead woman (Daniel’s deceased first wife)
o   Beauty in youth, frozen beauty
o   Idea that you can only be beautiful when you’re young; association of age with ugliness
-          She has to keep hair pinned up
o   Symbolism of restriction, constraint
-          Protagonist’s disconnect with her own body
o   Needs validation from others (example: from lover)
o   Idea that her body is useless until her lover sees it – she’s incomplete before this experience

“El árbol” (1939)
Characters
-          Brígida – protagonist, unhappily married woman
-          Luis – her elderly husband, who she eventually leaves

Summary
Young woman, Brígida, is at a piano concert and reflects back on her failed marriage. Provoked by the songs of the concert, she enters into a dream-like world of memory and goes through memories of her adolescence and marriage chronologically. Her marriage to her old husband, Luis, was unsatisfactory due to a lack of communication and his lack of love and passion for her. She deluded and distracted herself by hanging out in her dressing room and staring at the rubber tree outside the window. When the tree was chopped down, she realized her unhappiness and ended her marriage. The story ends at the end of the concert, which corresponds in the subconscious world to the tree’s being chopped down.

General Ideas/Themes
-          Idea of this story as a sort of female, abbreviated version of a “Bildungsroman”
-          Influence of surrealism
o   Fading between dream and reality
o   Importance of memory
o   Conscious vs. subconscious worlds
-          Play with sense of time (temporalidad) – mix of past and present, starts in present/future but then goes back through past to tell the story
o   Flashback
-          Symbolism of tree
o   The tree represents the permanence and stability of marriage, that one day, is abruptly destroyed, leaving only a lack of communication and love between two humans
-          Idea of beautiful illusion vs. ugly reality (the ugliness of street when tree is torn down)
o   Sordidness, dirtiness, filth – of world outside (street), and of life
-          Use of music (classical – Mozart, Chopin, etc.)
o   The music is all during the “present,” at the concert, this is what subtly links the “present” and the recollection of the “past”
-          Abrupt transitions
-          Use of silence
-          Sense of fantasy – abrupt transitions, vague references to fragments of classical music
-          Abrupt changes of emotion, confused emotion (example: when she wakes up and then when she goes into dressing room)


“Las islas nuevas” (1939)
Characters
-          Yolanda – protagonist (sort of); middle aged single woman
-          Federico – Yolanda’s brother
-          Don Sylvester – Yolanda’s ex-fiancé
-          Juan Manuel – Yolanda’s lover later on
-          Elsa – Juan Manuel’s fragile wife, dead 5 years before story begins

Summary
“New Islands”, written by woman author Maria Luisa Bombal is a short story about several main characters. The author is known for writing her stories in a mood halfway between reality and dream world and this is exactly what she has done in this story. The main characters of the story are Yolanda, her brother Federico, her ex fiancé Don Sylvester, Juan Manuel, Juan Manuel’s mother, Juan Manuel’s dead wife Elsa, and Juan Manuel’s son Billy. Don Sylvester received a letter from Yolanda thirty years ago and he is still confused about why she left him. In the letter she starts with “Sylvester, I cannot marry you. Believe me, I have thought over at great length. It isn’t possible. It just isn’t” and she ends the letter with “I weep, Sylvester, I weep; and I cannot explain myself – Yolanda.” Sylvester sees her again thirty years later but she wont talk to him and he is stuck with no answers. Some intimacy evolves between Yolanda and Juan Manuel but once again she is scared to commit and tells him to leave. Is it because she is very sick and scared that she will die soon? No one knows. Yolanda has some dreams, sometimes they are nice dreams, and sometimes they are bad dreams. There is something about her that is left unsaid. Is she an angel or maybe a fairy? Several hints draw the reader to either one of these conclusions. “Her right shoulder – on which something light and flexible looms, drooping down to cover a small portion of her back. A wing, or rather, the beginning of a wing. Or more exactly, the stump of a wing. A small, atrophied member which she now strokes carefully, as if dreading the touch.” (Bombal, 202) Could it be that she has some weird disease and wants to save the two men from getting more attached to her because she is scared she is about to die? Juan Manuel leaves to go home to see his son. He calls Yolanda because she seems to still be on his mind but he hangs up the second she answers. He says that he is afraid of the truth and that the “sweet and terrible secret” of her shoulder lay in her dreams. (Bombal, 205) The story has a lot of things to discuss and it leaves the reader with a lot of unsettling doubts. What impact did the islands have to the story? What was with Yolanda’s dreams? Why could Yolanda not be with Sylvester or Juan Manuel?

Themes
-          Dream
o   Yolanda’s nightmares all the time
-          Gender, female concerns
o   Yolanda as the unhappy old-ish single woman
o   Death of Juan Manuel’s frail wife (5 years before story’s time period), idea of women as fragile
o   Idea of female beauty as fragile – also, descriptions of Yolanda’s hair as thick and long (Bombal always writes about hair…)
-          Death, aging
o   Juan Manuel’s dead wife, Elsa – she stays the same as he ages
-          Writing style
o   No real protagonist – alternates between Yolanda and Juan Manuel
o   So many things left “unfinished” – no real ending/conclusion; never any explanation about the islands or why Yolanda didn’t want to marry Sylvester or anything……