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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Biography  



2.1  Travel in south, solitude  





2.2  War of the Pacific  





2.3  Literary Circle  





2.4  National Union  





2.5  Later life  







3 Political views  





4 Legacy  





5 References  





6 Secondary bibliography  





7 External links  














Manuel González Prada






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Manuel Gonzales Prada)

Manuel González Prada
Born(1844-01-05)January 5, 1844
DiedJuly 22, 1918(1918-07-22) (aged 74)
Lima, Peru
Burial placeCementerio Presbítero Matías Maestro
12°02′34S 77°00′34W / 12.042852552053436°S 77.00957408578998°W / -12.042852552053436; -77.00957408578998
Alma materReal Convictorio de San Carlos
Known forInfluences on indigenismo and Peruvian nationalism
Political partyNational Union

Jose Manuel de los Reyes González de Prada y Ulloa (Lima, January 5, 1844 – Lima, July 22, 1918) was a Peruvian politician and anarchist, literary critic and director of the National Library of Peru. The first writer to criticize the oligarchy within Peru,[1] he is well remembered as a social critic who helped develop Peruvian intellectual thought in the early twentieth century, as well as the academic style known as modernismo.

He was born into the aristocratic class.[2] He was close in spirit to Clorinda Matto de Turner whose first novel, Torn from the Nest approached political indigenismo, and to Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera, who like González Prada, practiced a positivism sui generis.

Early life[edit]

González Prada was born on January 5, 1844, in Lima to a wealthy, conservative, aristocratic Spanish family.[1][3][2] His father was the judge and politician Francisco González de Prada Marrón y Lombrera, who served as Member of the Superior Court of Justice of Lima and Mayor of Lima. His mother was María Josefa Álvarez de Ulloa y Rodríguez de la Rosa. His grandfather was an important administrative figure in the Viceroyalty of Peru.[2]

Due to the political exile of his father, the family temporarily settled down in Valpariso, where he started his education at an English school. During his youth, González Prada would remove the "de" portion of his name in repudiation of his family's aristocratic background.[3] Upon returning to Peru, his father was elected Mayor of Lima in 1857 and he continued his studies at the Seminary of Santo Toribio. Prada abandoned Santo Toribio and enrolled the liberal San Carlos Convictorium, where he studied law and letters.

He would go on to live much of his life in Lima, living in a city full of Spanish traditions and conservatism, though he would become estranged from much of his family.[3]

Biography[edit]

Travel in south, solitude[edit]

For a period of time, González Prada traveled through Southern Peru, especially near Cerro de Pasco, where he met with peasants and some of the indigenous peoples of Peru, developing an opposition to centralismo in Lima.[2] Following the death of his father in 1863, González Prada would live in the Tutumo hacienda of his family until 1869.[2] During this period of solitude, he would experiment with a chemistry lab, developing a profitable starch compound, became a more improved poet and received political literature from Europe that would influence him.[2]

War of the Pacific[edit]

In 1879, he would release Cuartos de hora just prior to Chile's invasion of Peru, attacking the ruling class and Catholic Church.[4] During Peru's impending defeat by Chile in the War of the Pacific, González Prada would stay in his home for three years, refusing to look at the foreign invaders occupying Peru.[1][2] The conflict proved to him that Peru was a failure under the economic oligarchy and that large reforms were necessary to improve the nation.[1] He would identify businessmen, clergy, military leaders and politicians as the upper class, saying that their wealth and power was gained through crony capitalism.[1] González Prada saw the political elites in two fashions; the civilian elite who stole public funds through special interest groups and the militaristic caudillos who plundered state coffers blatantly.[1] To enforce this system, he said that the elites utilized political repression through the police and military.[1] Culturally, he said the elites were foreign to the majority of Peruvians since they adopted Spanish customs and continued colonial practices, including feudalism, continuing inequality and poor development in rural areas.[1]

Literary Circle[edit]

He was an original partner in the Lima Literary Club and he participated in the foundation of the Peruvian Literary Circle, a vehicle to propose a literature based on science and the future.[5] The Literary Circle saw themselves as freethinkers and that they were destined to change Peru, reaching out to González Prada, who immediately reoriented the groups direction.[2][5] During his first address to the group at the Ateneo, he would criticize those who looked to the past, stating "Our liberty will be useless if we limit ourselves in torm to the exaggerated purism of Madrid, or if in substance we submit ourselves to the Syllabus of Rome. Let us rid ourselves of the tendency that induces us to prefer the foliage of words to the fruit of ideas."[5] In 1886, he became the head of the Literary Circle, stating:[2]

I see myself, from this day on, at the head of a group destined to become the radical party of our literature.

During Fiestas Patrias on 28 July 1888, González Prada's Speech at the Politeama, read by an Ecuadorian orator due to the writer's stage fright, received thunderous applause by the audience, with President of Peru Andrés Avelino Cáceres, who was in attendance, saying "l did not know whether to arrest him or embrace him".[5] The publication of the speech was unsuccessfully censored by the Cáceres government.[2]

His most famous book, Free Pages, caused a public outcry that brought González Prada dangerously close to excommunication from the Catholic Church. His mother, a devout Catholic, died in 1888 and his criticism became more vitriolic afterwards. He said the Church "preached the sermon on the mount and practiced the morals of Judas." In fact González Prada was part of a group of social reformers that included Ricardo Palma, Juana Manuela Gorriti, Clorinda Matto de Turner and Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera. These important authors were concerned with the enduring influence of Spanish colonialism in Peru. González Prada was perhaps the most radical of them all. The most radical work he published during his lifetime was Hours of Battle, translated as Hard Times.

National Union[edit]

González Prada in 1915

In political life, González Prada was initially a member of the Civilista Party, but left to found with his friends, a radical party known as the National Union, a party of "propaganda and attack." The Literary Circle was transformed into National Union in 1891.[2] González Prada was named as a presidential candidate, but had to flee to Europe following persecution. He would spend seven years in Europe, visiting France and Spain, finally returning to Peru in May 1898.[2] Upon his return, he called for social revolution and the "greatest liberty" be brought through social reform.[2] He stood as his party's Presidential Candidate in the Presidential election of 1899 and came in third with 0.95% of the vote, with aristocrat Eduardo López de Romaña receiving 97% of the vote. Following the presidential election, he was asked to work for the newly formed government.

In 1902, González Prada would leave National Union and instead chose to write for working-class newspapers.[2] He began writing for Los Parias, a Peruvian anarchist newspaper, in 1904.[2] He also took up the post of director of the National Library of PeruonAbancay Avenue and helped to improve and reorganise the library to one of international stature.

Later life[edit]

His books Minúsculas (1901) and Exóticas (1911) are often considered as modernista although his work transcends the scope of that movement. Some critics have suggested that his poetry is pre-proletarian. Baladas peruanas (1935), perhaps his best book, is a vindication of the Indian. His metrical and rhythmical innovations and experiments are remarkable in Spanish-American poetry. Horas de lucha (1908) is a good example of his prose.[6]

Until his death, González Prada dedicated himself to educating university students and workers, holding Luz y Amor (Light and Love) discussion groups and sharing his writings with them.[2] González Prada died of cardiac arrest on 22 July 1918 and was buried in the Cementerio Presbítero Matías Maestro as a Peruvian patriot.[7] His writings on Anarchism, Anarquía, was posthumously released in 1936.[8]

Political views[edit]

Upon returning to Peru from Europe in 1898, Gonzalez Prada would support anarchism, believing it provided more liberty compared to liberalism, which had prevented reform in Peru.[2] He had similar anarchist thoughts as Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Bakunin. An atheist, a follower of Darwin, Spencer, and Comte, Manuel González Prada was a powerful polemicist whose targets were the Catholic Church, the Spanish tradition, and, generally, any form of conservatism. He would describe anarchism as "a new Christianity ... without Christ" and that it would provide "unlimited freedom and the greatest well-being for the individual with the abolition of the state and private property".[2]

Gonzalez Prada did not see the crisis facing Peru as a class conflict, saying that one class achieving power over the other would only mimic actual social justice.[2] When giving the "El intelectual y el obrero" address to the anarchist group Federación de Obreros Panaderos during a International Workers' Day event in 1905, he would make the cautioning statement that "revolutions come from above, but are made operative from below ... every revolution once successful tends to become a government of force, every victorious revolutionary degenerates into a conservative".[2]

After seeing the failures of nationalism, his strong moral values and after embracing anarchism, Gonzalez Prada concluded:[2]

"Given the general inclination of man to abuse power, all government is evil and all authority means tyranny."

Legacy[edit]

The legacy of González Prada would not be recognized until later into the 20th century, influencing progressive movements within Peru.[3] His writings would also influence indigenismo due to his criticism of the pervasive Spanish culture amongst the Peruvian elite.[1] Linguistics scholar Bohdan Plaskacz would describe González Prada "as one of the greatest essayists of Latin America, champion of the rights of Peruvian Indians and spiritual father of the socialist movement of the following generation".[9] Peruvian intellectuals influenced by González Prada include José Carlos Mariátegui and Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre.[1] Víctor Andrés Belaúnde was influenced by González Prada's description of a superficial elite class.[1] His intellectual and stylistic footprint can be found in the writing of Clorinda Matto de Turner, Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera, José Santos Chocano, Aurora Cáceres, César Vallejo, José Carlos Mariátegui and Mario Vargas Llosa.

Following a curriculum change in the 1960s for the studies of the Peruvian Armed Forces, military students were taught the writings of González Prada and became disillusioned with the political elite, with officers ultimately overthrowing the government of Fernando Belaúndein1968 Peruvian coup d'état due to concerns of inequality.[1]

Thomas Ward, director of the Latin American and Latino Studies at Loyola University Maryland, would say of González Prada:[10]

"[E]ach century can boast of a voice that sounds in the desert shouting against colonialism, the corrupt, and its accomplices. ... A voice that, from the ruins of the War of the Pacific, ... rose up against pusillanimity, against the lack of principles, the Creole concept of Peru excluding the Andean, was that of Manuel González Prada."

Besides being a philosopher and a significant political agitator, González Prada is important as the first Latin American author to write in a style known as modernismo (modernista in Spanish, different from Anglo-American modernism) poet in Peru, anticipating some of the literary innovations that Rubén Darío would shortly bring to the entire Hispanic world. He also introduced new devices such as the triolet, rondel and Malayan pantun which revitalized Spanish verse. Besides his poetry, he cultivated the essay, and most recently Isabelle Tauzin Castellanos has published some of his hitherto unknown fiction.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Gorman, Stephen M. (September 1980). "The Economic and Social Foundations of Elite Power in Peru: A Review of the Literature". Social and Economic Studies. 29 (2/3). University of the West Indies: 292–319.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Chavarría, Jesús (1 May 1970). "The Intellectuals and the Crisis of Modern Peruvian Nationalism: 1870-1919". Hispanic American Historical Review. 50 (2): 257–278.
  • ^ a b c d Mead, Jr., Robert G. (September 1953). "Manuel González Prada: Peruvian Judge of Spain". Publications of the Modern Language Association of America. 68 (4): 696–715.
  • ^ Chavarría, Jesús (1 May 1970). "The Intellectuals and the Crisis of Modern Peruvian Nationalism: 1870-1919". Hispanic American Historical Review. 50 (2): 257–278.
  • ^ a b c d Gillis, James A. (1967). Gonzalez Prada: His Ideas and Influence. Loyola University Chicago. p. 17.
  • ^ THE PENGUIN POETS LATIN-AMERICAN VERSE, edited by Enrique Caracciolo-Trejo
  • ^ "¿Qué personajes históricos están enterrados en el Presbítero Maestro?". infobae (in European Spanish). 19 July 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  • ^ Books Abroad Volume 14 - Page 12 Roy Temple House, Ernst Erich Noth - 1940 "As for his ideology, Anarquia is a formidable arraignment of the Creole oligarchies and a plea for anarchism, which was the position of the Peruvian Left at that time. "
  • ^ Plaskacz, Bohdan (1970). "Manuel Gonzalez Prada and Prince Peter Kropotkin — Aristocrats Turned Anarchists". Slavic and East-European Studies. 15: 83–92.
  • ^ González Prada, Manuel (2021). Anarquía (Primeraición ed.). Miraflores, Lima, Perú: Revuelta Editores. pp. 7–10. ISBN 9786124824753.
  • Secondary bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


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