Criollismo (Spanish pronunciation: [kɾjoˈʎismo]) is a literary movement that was active from the end of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century throughout Hispanic America. It is considered the Hispanic counterpart to American literary regionalism. Using a realist style to portray the scenes, language, customs and manners of the country the writer was from, especially the lower and peasant classes, criollismo led to an original literature based on the continent's natural elements, mostly epic and foundational. It was strongly influenced by the wars of independence from Spain and also denotes how each country in its own way defines criollo.[1]

Rómulo Gallegos.

History

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According to the German philologist Ulrich Leo, literary criollismo arose in Venezuela at the end of the 19th century, although it will have to wait several decades to find general acceptance in Latin America.[2] Luis Manuel Urbaneja Achelpohl was the first to use and define the term to refer to his own literature in an 1895 essay entitled "On National Literature", where he argues for "patriotic affairs" and the "tropical soul" denouncing a supposed servile cosmopolitanism: "We are here: today as yesterday we come to advocate for essentially American[3] art (...) Come, my brothers, with the spontaneous flower of your intelligence. The future is assured for us."[4]

Notable examples

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Notable criollista writers and works include: Luis Manuel Urbaneja Achepohl, Eduardo Blanco, Francisco Lazo Martí and Rómulo Gallegos's "Doña Bárbara" (1929) from Venezuela, José Eustasio Rivera's jungle novel "La vorágine" (1924) from Colombia; Horacio Quiroga (Uruguay), Ricardo Güiraldes, Benito Lynch (Argentina), Mario Augusto Rodriguez (Panama), and Manuel Gonzales Prada (Peru). In Chile, the criollismo movement shifted the cultural focus from urban life to rural life, and incorporated the rural world into the formation of the national identity. Some of the most representative Chilean criollista works are Baldomero Lillo's novels Sub Terra and Sub Sole, Mariano Latorre's novels Zurzulita and Cuna de cóndores (Cradle of Condors), Federico Gana's novel Días de campo (Countryside Days) and Antonio Acevedo Hernández's plays Árbol viejo and Chañarcillo.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Criollismo www.memoriachilena.cl Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos Copyright 2013© MEMORIA CHILENA ®. Todos los Derechos Reservados May 16, 2009 Retrieved September 04, 2013 (in Spanish)
  2. ^ Ulrich, Leo. "Escepticismo y humorismo. Interpretación filológica de una joya de la prosa modernista venezolana" (PDF). Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  3. ^ The author here refers to the American continent. The term Americano to define the inhabitants of Spanish and Portuguese-speaking America was vastly used by Latin American intellectuals during the 19th century.
  4. ^ Hispanoamericanos, C. (2020-03-06). "Guillermo Sucre y las poéticas del ensayo venezolano". Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-09.
  5. ^ Criollismo www.memoriachilena.cl Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos Copyright 2013© MEMORIA CHILENA ®. Todos los Derechos Reservados may 16, 2009 Retrieved September 04, 2013 (in Spanish)