- Joaquín Arderíus
Joaquín Arderíus y Sánchez Fortún (May 1885,
Lorca , in Murcia—January 20 1969 ,Mexico City ) was a Spanish experimental and political novelist.Arderíus studied in
Madrid before taking engineering courses at theUniversity of Liège . He abandoned these studies to dedicate himself to literature and leftist politics, and was jailed many times for his revolutionary activities during the dictatorship ofMiguel Primo de Rivera . In 1927, Arderíus founded the very successful periodical "Oriente". He also edited, together withAntonio Espina andJosé Díaz Fernández , the political periodical "Nueva España" from 1930 to 1931, with an initial print run of 40,000 copies. In 1929, he became affiliated with theCommunist Party of Spain , but after 1933, he became aligned with the Republican Left.His novels include: "Mis mendigos" (1915); the
Nietzschean "Así me fecundó Zaratustra" (1923); the erotic "Yo y tres mujeres" ("I and Three Women") (1924); "La duquesa de Nit" (1926); "La espuela" (1927); "Los príncipes iguales" (1928); "Justo" (1929), a satire onRoman Catholicism ; "El comedor de la pensión Venecia" (1930); the political "Campesinos" (1931), and "Crimen" (1934). With José Díaz Fernández, he wrote "Vida de Fermín Galán" ("Life of Fermín Galán") (1931).During the
Spanish Civil War , he served as president of the Antifascist organizationSocorro Rojo Internacional , composed of unions, workers’ organizations, and leftist political parties, which supported the Republican cause againstFrancisco Franco . Arderíus went into exile in 1939, first toFrance and thenMexico , afterAdolf Hitler 's occupation ofParis . He worked for the embassy of the Spanish Republic there, and later in the Mexican Ministry of National Education. During his exile, he abandoned the writing of novels, and instead wrote a biography ofDon Juan de Austria .Though they were considered too difficult to be commercially successful, Arderíus’ novels are currently being reexamined for their influence on other anti-Franco modernists and post-modernist novelists.
ources
* [http://www.antorcha.org/liter/arderius.htm Biography] "(in Spanish)"
* V. Fuentes, «De la novela expresionista a la revolucionaria proletaria: en tomo a la narrativa de J . Arderius», en Papeles de Son Armadans, CL.XXIX (Feb 1971), pp. 197-215;
* M. F. Vilches de Frutos, «El subjetivismo como constante vital: la trayectoria literaria de J. Arderius», en Dicenda. Cuadernos de Filología Hispánica, III (1984), pp. 141-161.
* Rosemary Goring (editor), "Larousse Dictionary of Writers" (1994), p. 36.
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