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Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda y Arteaga (March 23, 1814 – February 1, 1873) was a 19th-century Cuban-born Spanish writer. Born in Puerto Príncipe, now Camagüey, she lived in Cuba until she was 22. Her family moved to Spain in 1836, where she started writing as La Peregrina (The Pilgrim) and lived there until 1859, when she moved back to Cuba with her second husband until his death in 1863, after which she moved back to Spain. She died in Madrid in 1873 from diabetes at the age of 58.

Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda
Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda by Federico Madrazo, 1857
BornMaría Gertrudis de los Dolores Gómez de Avellaneda y Arteaga
March 23, 1814
Puerto Príncipe (modern day Camagüey), Cuba
DiedFebruary 1, 1873(1873-02-01) (aged 58)
Madrid, Spain
Pen nameLa Peregrina
Occupationwriter, poet, novelist, playwright
LanguageSpanish
NationalitySpanish-Cuban
GenreRomanticism
Notable worksSab (novel)
SpousePedro Sabater,
Domingo Verdugo y Massieu
PartnerIgnacio de Cepeda y Alcalde,
Gabriel García Tassara

She was a prolific writer and wrote 20 plays and numerous poems. Her most famous work, however, is the antislavery novel Sab, published in Madrid in 1841. The eponymous protagonist is a slave who is deeply in love with his mistress Carlota, who is entirely oblivious to his feelings for her.

Life

Early life

María Gertrudis de los Dolores Gómez de Avellaneda y Arteaga was born on March 23, 1814,[1] in Santa María de Puerto Príncipe, which was often referred to simply as Puerto Príncipe and which is now known as Camagüey. Puerto Príncipe was a provincial capital in central Cuba in Avellaneda's day, and Cuba was a region of Spain.[2] Her father, Manuel Gómez de Avellaneda y Gil de Taboada, had arrived in Cuba in 1809[1] and was a Spanish naval officer in charge of the port of Nuevitas.[3] Her mother, Francisca María del Rosario de Arteaga y Betancourt, was a criolla[a] with ascendants from the Basque Country and the Canary Islands, member of the wealthy Arteaga y Betancourt family, which was one of the most prominent and important families in Puerto Príncipe.[5] Avellaneda was the first of five children from her parents' marriage, but only she and her younger brother Manuel survived childhood.[2]

 
Woodcut of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

Her father died in 1823 when she was nine years old, and her mother remarried ten months later to Gaspar Isidoro de Escalada y López de la Peña,[6] who was a Spanish lieutenant colonel posted in Puerto Príncipe.[7] Avellaneda strongly disliked him and thought that he was too strict; she was glad whenever he was stationed away from home. From the time her mother remarried until the time she left Cuba for Spain, Avellaneda only saw her stepfather two or three months a year.[8] She had two older half-siblings from her father's first marriage named Manuel and Gertrudis, a younger brother also named Manuel, and three younger half-siblings from her mother's marriage to Escalada: Felipe, Josefa, and Emilio.[6] Little is known about Avellaneda's relationship with her older half-siblings,[b] except that they lived somewhere else. Her younger brother Manuel was her favorite, and she was in charge of her three younger half-siblings.[6]

When she was 13 years old she was betrothed to a distant relative who was one of the wealthiest men in Puerto Príncipe.[6] Her maternal grandfather promised her a fifth of his estate if she went through with this marriage,[9] which he had arranged himself.[10] At the age of 15 she broke off that engagement against her family's wishes, and as a result she was left out of her grandfather's will. (Her grandfather died in 1832, when she was 17 or 18.)[1] It is thought that this traumatic experience fueled her hatred of arranged marriages and patriarchal authority and her belief that married women were essentially slaves.[6] Her aversion to marriage was also due to the unhappy marriage of her cousin Angelita, who was her only friend after she refused to marry the man her family had chosen for her.[11]

Avellaneda was, by her own admission, a spoiled child,[7] as her family's slaves did all the chores.[8] She had a lot of free time, which she used to read voraciously.[8] One of her tutors was the Cuban poet José María Heredia.[12]

Move to Spain

By 1836 Escalada had become concerned enough about the possibility of a slave rebellion that he persuaded his wife to sell off her property and slaves and move the family from Cuba to Spain.[13] Avellaneda, now 22, supported the idea because she wanted to meet her father's relatives in Andalusia.[14] The family set sail for Europe on April 9, 1836 and arrived in Bordeaux, France two months later. They spent 18 days there before sailing to A Coruña in Galicia, Spain. They stayed in A Coruña with Escalada's family for two years.[1] Avellaneda was invited into some distinguished social circles in Galicia and in 1837 was engaged to Francisco Ricafort, son of Mariano Ricafort, the Captain-General of Galicia at the time. She did not marry him, however, as she had decided not marry until she was economically independent, and her stepfather withheld her inheritance. When Francisco was sent to fight in the Carlist Wars, she left Galicia to go to Seville with her younger brother Manuel; she would never see him again.[15][1] She was glad to leave Galicia, as she was criticized by Galician women for her refusal to do manual labor and for her love of study.[16] She also disliked the damp climate and lack of cultural life.[17]

In the province of Seville in Andalusia she visited Constantina, where her father's family lived.[18] In 1839, shortly after her arrival in Seville, she met and fell deeply in love with Ignacio de Cepeda y Alcalde, a wealthy, well-educated, and socially prominent young man.[19] The first man that Avellaneda had a loved was Ignacio de Cepeda, who was the focus of many of her writings, mainly love letters. (There were forty love letters total, spanning from 1839 until 1854. After his death, his widow inherited and published them.) She also wrote him an autobiography in July 1839. Biographers of Avellaneda have relied too heavily on this account for information about her early life, as it was written for a specific purpose: to make a good impression on Cepeda.[8] For example, she said that she was younger than she really was because Cepeda was two years younger than her, and she wanted to make herself look as young as possible.[20][c] Because of the over-reliance on this biased source, few details are known for certain about the first 22 years of her life.[3] The autobiography written to Cepeda was the second of the four autobiographies she wrote during her lifetime; the other three were written in 1838, 1846, and 1850, respectively.[21] Though she loved Cepeda very much, he did not want to pursue a marriage with her. One reason he gave was that she was not rich enough. He also gave reason that she was not feminine enough stating that she was more verbal than should be and was often too aggressive for a woman of the 19th century. After her relationship with Cepeda ended, she went to Madrid.

In Madrid she had a number of tumultuous love affairs, some with prominent writers associated with Spanish Romanticism. Her affairs included several engagements to different men. There she met and had an affair with Gabriel Garcia Tassara. He was also a poet from Seville. In 1844, she had a daughter out of wedlock with Tassara. Soon after the baby was born, Tassara left her and the baby, refusing to call her his daughter. The baby died several months later. This left Avellaneda heartbroken at the height of her career.

Avellaneda soon married a youngest man, don Pedro Sabater, who worked for the Cortes and was very wealthy. He was also a writer and wrote many poems for his wife. They married on May 10, 1846. Sabater was extremely sick with what was believed to be cancer. He died shortly after their marriage leaving Avellaneda devastated. As a result, she entered a convent right after his death and wrote a play called Egilona which did not receive good reviews like her last one had.

In January 1853, she tried to enroll into the Royal Academy in after a seat belonging to a dead friend, Juan Nicasio Gallego, of hers became vacant. Even though she was admired by many, being a woman meant that it was not her place to be writing publicly. She was from an upper-class family of wealth and recognition, it did not give her the fame she desired from writing so easily. While all the males in the academy were aware of her works and were fascinated by them, they did not give her the right to enter, solely on the fact that she was a woman.

Return to Cuba

 
Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

She remarried on April 26, 1855 to a colonel, don Domingo Verdugo y Massieu. In 1859, due to her husband's injuries they moved from Madrid back to Cuba, where both were born. They were close to Francisco Serrano, who was the captain-general of Cuba at the time. When she arrived in Cuba, she was warmly welcomed with concerts, parties, and music. Shortly after their arrival, Verdugo's health worsened and he finally died on October 28, 1863. This left her in severe distress, and she decided return to Madrid after a few visits to New York, London, Paris and Seville.

Final years and death

She lived in Madrid her last years. Her brother Manuel died in 1868.[1] She published the first volume of her collected literary works (Spanish: Obras literarias), omitting the novels Sab and Dos mujeres.

At 58, she died on February 1, 1873, in Madrid,[22] but she was buried in Seville, with her brother Manuel.

Literary works

Al partir

¡Perla del mar! ¡Estrella de Occidente!
¡Hermosa Cuba! Tu brillante cielo
la noche cubre con su opaco velo
como cubre el dolor mi triste frente.

¡Voy a partir!...La chusma diligente
para arrancarme del nativo suelo
las velas iza, y pronto a su desvelo
la brisa acude de tu zona ardiente.

¡Adiós, patria feliz, edén querido!
¡Doquier que el hado en su furor me impela,
tu dulce nombre halagará mi oído!

¡Adiós¡... Ya cruje la turgente vela…
El ancla se alza... el buque,
estremecido,
las olas corta y silencioso vuela!

Al partir
On leaving

Pearl of the sea! Star of the Occident!
Beautiful Cuba! Night’s murky veil
Is drawn across the sky’s refulgent trail,
And I succumb to sorrow’s ravishment.

Now I depart! …As to their labors bent,
The crewmen now their tasks assail,
To wrest me from my home, they hoist the sail
To catch the ardent winds that you have sent.

Farewell, my Eden, land so dear!
Whatever in its furor fate now sends,
Your cherished name will grace my ear!

Farewell!... The anchor from the sea ascends,
The sails are full…. The ship breaks clear,
And with soft quiet motion, wave and water fends. 4

Gomez de Avellaneda was often either praised or shunned for her literary works. She wrote poems, autobiographies, novels and plays. During the 1840s and 1850s was when she was most famous for her writings. She had other female rivals in writing such as Carolina Coronado and Rosalia de Castro but none of them achieved as much praise as Gomez de Avellaneda received from her literary works. She inspired men and women alike with her stories of love, feminism, and a changing world.

Her poetry consists of styles in Hispanic poetry from late neoclassicism through romanticism. Her works are influenced by some of the major French, English, Spanish, and Latin American poets. Her poems reflects her life experiences including her rebellious attitude and independence in a male-dominated society (regarding herself as a woman writer); sense of loneliness and exile from her Cuba (regarding her love for Cuba); and melancholy and depression (regarding her heartbroken affairs). Her poetry surrounds the themes of Cuba, love and eroticism, poetry itself, neoclassical concepts, historical references, religion, philosophical meditations, personal and public occasions, and poetic portraits.

The theme of Cuba is evident in her poem “Al partir” (“On Leaving”), which was in 1836 when la Avellaneda was on the boat leaving Cuba for Spain. It is a sonnet about her love for Cuba and reflects her emotions as she departed.

Novels

The most controversial and the first novel she wrote, Sab, was published in 1841. This novel can be compared to Uncle Tom's Cabin in that both novels are literary protests against the practice of slavery. Sab is about a Cuban slave, named Sab, who is in love with Carlota, his master's daughter. Carlota (the heroine) marries a rich white Englishman, Enrique Otway. The book stresses Sab's moral superiority over the white characters. This is because his soul is pure while the Englishman's business interests are his primary concern. The enterprises of Enrique and his father are juxtaposed against the Carlota's family ingenio (sugarcane plantation) which is in decline because Carlota's father is of a good nature, which means he cannot be a good business man.

Sab was banned in Cuba for its unconventional approach to society and its problems. Avellaneda's works were considered scandalous because of her recurrent themes of interracial love and society's divisions. In fact, Sab could be considered an early example of negrismo, a literary tendency when white creole authors depicted black people, usually with a favorable stance. This kind of writing was often cultivated by women authors who might have been arguing, as Gómez de Avellaneda was, that there was a parallel between the black condition and the female condition. Two other Creole women who cultivated negrista fiction were the Argentine Juana Manuela Gorriti (Peregrinaciones de una alma triste & El ángel caído) and the Peruvian Teresa González de Fanning whose Roque Moreno paints a less than sympathetic stance toward blacks and mulattoes. Of course Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin could also be understood in this light.

Two famous poems were from her love letters to Ignacio de Cepeda. Both were called “A él” (“To Him”). The poems reflect her theme of love for Cepeda. The first poem, much longer and more complex than the second, regards her hope in being with Cepeda. However, because Cepeda did not want a committed relationship with her and married another woman, it made la Avellaneda suffer. As a result, the second poem is about their final break, her resignation to their relationship.

Source: John Charles Chasteen, "Born in Blood and Fire, A Concise History of Latin America"

Legacy

There has been much debate over whether Gertrud's Gómez de Avellaneda is a Cuban or Spanish writer.[23] She is widely viewed as the "epitome of the Romantic poet, the tragic heroine who rises to public acclaim yet, in private, is bitterly unhappy." Whatever the accuracy of this image, it is clear that she actively promoted it during her life and that many influential critics and admirers continued to promote this image of Avellaneda after her death.[24] Also, much of her work is read from a biographical perspective because of the posthumous publication of her love letters to Ignacio Cepeda, to the extent that her life has overshadowed the wider cultural significance of her literary output.[24]

See also

Footnotes

Notes

  1. ^ In Spanish the term "Creole" (criollo/criolla) refers to a person of Spanish ancestry who was born in the New World; it does not imply that a person is of mixed European and black descent, as it does in English.[4]
  2. ^ She never mentioned her older half-siblings in her memoirs.[3]
  3. ^ Avellaneda consistently shaved a few years off her real age in her autobiographical writings, perhaps because of personal vanity, and perhaps because she generally had romantic relationships with men who were slightly younger than her.[4]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f Davies 2001, p. 201.
  2. ^ a b Scott 1993, p. xi.
  3. ^ a b c Davies 2001, p. 3.
  4. ^ a b Scott 1993, p. 149.
  5. ^ Davies 2001, p. 3-4.
  6. ^ a b c d e Davies 2001, p. 5.
  7. ^ a b Gómez de Avellaneda 1993, p. 2.
  8. ^ a b c d Davies 2001, p. 4.
  9. ^ Gómez de Avellaneda 1993, p. 7.
  10. ^ Gómez de Avellaneda 1993, p. 10.
  11. ^ Gómez de Avellaneda 1993, p. 12-13.
  12. ^ Chang-Rodríguez & Filer 2013, p. 161.
  13. ^ Scott 1993, p. xii.
  14. ^ Davies 2001, p. 4-5.
  15. ^ Davies 2001, p. 10-11.
  16. ^ Gómez de Avellaneda 1993, p. 17.
  17. ^ Scott 1993, p. xiiI.
  18. ^ Davies 2001, p. 202.
  19. ^ Scott 1993, p. xv.
  20. ^ Scott 1993, p. 150.
  21. ^ Davies 2001, p. 1-2.
  22. ^ Davies 2001, p. 204.
  23. ^ Davies 2001, p. 1.
  24. ^ a b Davies 2001, p. 2.

References

  • Chang-Rodríguez, Raquel; Filer, Malva E. (2013). Voces de Hispanoamérica: antología literary (in Spanish) (4th ed.). Cengage Learning. pp. 161–162. ISBN 978-1111837921.
  • Davies, Catherine (2001). "Introduction". Sab. Hispanic Texts. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719057069.
  • Gómez de Avellaneda, Gertrudis (1993). "Autobiography". Sab and Autobiography. The Texas Pan American Series. Translated by Scott, Nina M. University of Texas Press. pp. 1–23. ISBN 978-0-292-70442-8.
  • Scott, Nina M. (1993). "Introduction". Sab and Autobiography. The Texas Pan American Series. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70442-8.

Further reading

Albin, María C., Megan Corbin, and Raúl Marrero-Fente. “Gertrudis the Great: First Abolitionist and Feminist in the Americas and Spain.” Gender and the Politics of Literature: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda. Ed. María C. Albin, Megan Corbin, and Raúl Marrero-Fente. Hispanic Issues On Line 18 (2017): 1–66. Web.

Albin, María C., Megan Corbin, and Raúl Marrero-Fente. “A Transnational Figure: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda and the American Press.” Gender and the Politics of Literature: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda. Ed. María C. Albin, Megan Corbin, and Raúl Marrero-Fente. Hispanic Issues On Line 18 (2017): 67–133. Web. https://cla.umn.edu/hispanic-issues/online

  • Albin, Maria C. Género, poesía y esfera pública: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda y la tradición romántica. Madrid: Trotta, 2002.
  • Albin, Maria C. “El costumbrismo feminista: los ensayos de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda.” Anales de Literatura Hispanoamericana. vol. 36 (2007): 159-170. This articles examines “La dama de gran tono” (1843).
  • Albin, Maria C. "Romanticismo y fin de siglo: Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda y José Martí." in La literatura iberoamericana en el 2000. Balances, perspectivas y prospectivas, Ed. Carmen Ruíz Barrionuevo. Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca, Spain, 2004.
  • Albin, Maria C. “El genio femenino y la autoridad literaria: “Luisa Molina” de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda.” Atenea 490 (2004): 115-130.
  • Albin, Maria C. “El cristianismo y la nueva imagen de la mujer: la figura histórica de María en los ensayos de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda.” In Perspectivas transatlánticas. Estudios coloniales hispanoamericanos. Ed. Raúl Marrero-Fente. Madrid: Verbum, 2004. 315-353.
  • Albin, Maria C. "Paisaje y política en la poesía de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda." Romance Notes XLI (2000): 25-35.
  • Albin, Maria C."Fronteras de género, nación y ciudadanía: La Ilustración. Album de las Damas (1845) de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda." in Actas del XIII Congreso de la Asociación Internacional de Hispanistas. Madrid: Castalia, 2000. 67-75. This article examines “Capacidad de las mujeres para el gobierno” (1845).
  • Albin, Maria C. "Género, imperio y colonia en la poesía de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda." Romance Languages Annual 10 (1999): 419-425.
  • Albin, Maria C. "La revista Album de Gómez de Avellaneda: La esfera pública y la crítica a la modernidad." Cincinnati Romance Review 14 (1995): 73-79.
  • Albin, Maria C."Ante el Niágara: Heredia, Sagra, Gómez de Avellaneda y el proyecto modernizador" in Tradición y actualidad de la literatura iberoamericana, Ed. Pamela Bacarisse. Vol.1. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1995. 2 vols. 69-78.
  • Gómez de Avellaneda, Gertrudis. Cuadernillos de viaje y La dama de gran tono. Compilación, introducción y notas Manuel Lorenzo Abdala. Los libros de Umsaloua, Sevilla, 2014. ISBN 978-84-942070-5-1
  • Castagnaro, R. Anthony. The Early Spanish American Novel. New York: Las Americas, 1971; "The Anti-Slavery Theme", 157-168.
  • Engle, Margarita. The Lightning Dreamer: Cuba's Greatest Abolitionist. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013.
  • Fernández-Medina, Nicolás. "The Artful Provocateur: Avellaneda's Sab in Readings of Nation, Race and Color," Torre de Papel XII.3 (2002): 36-48.
  • Fox-Lockert, Lucía. "Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda: Sab (1841)". Women Novelists in Spain and Spanish America. Metuchen, N.J: The Scarecrow Press, 1979.
  • Gold, Janet N. "The Feminine Bond: Victimization and Beyond in the Novels of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda". Spanish American Literature: From Romanticism to "Modernismo" in Latin America. Eds. David William Foster & Daniel Altamiranda. New York: Garland Publishing Co., 1997: 91-98.
  • Harter, Hugh. A. Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1981.
  • Harter, Hugh. A. "Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda". Spanish American Women Writers. Ed. Diane E. Marting. Westport: Greenwood Press 1990, pp. 210–225.
  • Hart, Stephen M. "Is Women's Writing in Spanish America Gender-Specific?" MLN 110 (1995): 335-352. Examines Gómez de Avellaneda in a context with other Latin American women authors.
  • Kirkpatrick, Susan. "Feminizing the Romantic Subject in Narrative: Gómez de Avellaneda". Las Románticas: Women Writers and Subjectivity in Spain, 1835-1850. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.
  • Kirkpatrick, Susan. "Gómez de Avellaneda's Sab: Gendering the Liberal Romantic Subject". In the Feminine Mode: Essays on Hispanic Women Writers. Eds, Noel Valis and Carol Maier. Lewisburg: Bucknell University press, 1990: 115-130.
  • Lazo, Raimundo. Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda. Havana, Cuba: Editorial Porrúa, S. A., 1972.
  • Lindstrom, Naomi. Early Spanish American Narrative. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004; sobre Gomez de Avellaneda, 99-103.
  • Mata-Kolster, Elba. "Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda (1814-1873)". Latin American Writers. Vol. I. Ed. Solé/Abreu. NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1989, pp. 175–180.
  • Miller, Beth. "Gertrude the Great: Avellaneda, Nineteenth-Century Feminist". Women in Hispanic Literature, Icons and Fallen Idols. Ed. Beth Miller. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1983.
  • Pastor, Brígida. "A Romance Life in Novel Fiction: The Early Career and Works of Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda", Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, LXXV, No. 2 (1998): 169-181.
  • Santos, Nelly E. "Las ideas feministas de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda". Spanish American Literature: From Romanticism to 'Modernismo' in Latin America. Eds. David William Foster & Daniel Altamiranda. New York & London: Garland, 1997: 100-105.
  • Schlau, Stacey. "Stranger in a Strange Land: The Discourse of Alienation in Gomez de Avellaneda's Abolitionist Novel Sab." Hispania 69.3 (September 1986): 495-503.
  • Scott, Nina. "Shoring up the 'Weaker Sex'. Avellaneda and Nineteenth-Century Gender Ideology". Reinterpreting the Spanish American Essay. Women Writers of the 19th and 20th Centuries. Ed. Doris Meyer. Austin: University of Texas, 1995: 57-67.
  • Solow, Barbara L., ed. Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.
  • Sommer, Doris. "Sab C'est Moi". Foundational Fictions. The National Romances of Latin America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
  • Various authors. "Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, 1814-1873". Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism, Volume 111. Ed. Lynn M. Zott. Detroit: Thomson Gale, 2002: 1-76.
  • Ward, Thomas. "Nature and Civilization in Sab and the Nineteenth-Century Novel in Latin America". Hispanófila 126 (1999): 25-40.
  • Vittorio Caratozzolo. "Il teatro di Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda". Il Capitello del Sole, Bologna, p. 352 (2002).

External links

  • Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda 1814-1873 2011-07-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Works by or about Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda at Internet Archive
  • Works by Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

gertrudis, gómez, avellaneda, arteaga, march, 1814, february, 1873, 19th, century, cuban, born, spanish, writer, born, puerto, príncipe, camagüey, lived, cuba, until, family, moved, spain, 1836, where, started, writing, peregrina, pilgrim, lived, there, until,. Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda y Arteaga March 23 1814 February 1 1873 was a 19th century Cuban born Spanish writer Born in Puerto Principe now Camaguey she lived in Cuba until she was 22 Her family moved to Spain in 1836 where she started writing as La Peregrina The Pilgrim and lived there until 1859 when she moved back to Cuba with her second husband until his death in 1863 after which she moved back to Spain She died in Madrid in 1873 from diabetes at the age of 58 Gertrudis Gomez de AvellanedaGertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda by Federico Madrazo 1857BornMaria Gertrudis de los Dolores Gomez de Avellaneda y ArteagaMarch 23 1814Puerto Principe modern day Camaguey CubaDiedFebruary 1 1873 1873 02 01 aged 58 Madrid SpainPen nameLa PeregrinaOccupationwriter poet novelist playwrightLanguageSpanishNationalitySpanish CubanGenreRomanticismNotable worksSab novel SpousePedro Sabater Domingo Verdugo y MassieuPartnerIgnacio de Cepeda y Alcalde Gabriel Garcia TassaraIn this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Gomez de Avellaneda and the second or maternal family name is Arteaga She was a prolific writer and wrote 20 plays and numerous poems Her most famous work however is the antislavery novel Sab published in Madrid in 1841 The eponymous protagonist is a slave who is deeply in love with his mistress Carlota who is entirely oblivious to his feelings for her Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Move to Spain 1 3 Return to Cuba 1 4 Final years and death 2 Literary works 3 Novels 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Footnotes 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Maria Gertrudis de los Dolores Gomez de Avellaneda y Arteaga was born on March 23 1814 1 in Santa Maria de Puerto Principe which was often referred to simply as Puerto Principe and which is now known as Camaguey Puerto Principe was a provincial capital in central Cuba in Avellaneda s day and Cuba was a region of Spain 2 Her father Manuel Gomez de Avellaneda y Gil de Taboada had arrived in Cuba in 1809 1 and was a Spanish naval officer in charge of the port of Nuevitas 3 Her mother Francisca Maria del Rosario de Arteaga y Betancourt was a criolla a with ascendants from the Basque Country and the Canary Islands member of the wealthy Arteaga y Betancourt family which was one of the most prominent and important families in Puerto Principe 5 Avellaneda was the first of five children from her parents marriage but only she and her younger brother Manuel survived childhood 2 Woodcut of Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Her father died in 1823 when she was nine years old and her mother remarried ten months later to Gaspar Isidoro de Escalada y Lopez de la Pena 6 who was a Spanish lieutenant colonel posted in Puerto Principe 7 Avellaneda strongly disliked him and thought that he was too strict she was glad whenever he was stationed away from home From the time her mother remarried until the time she left Cuba for Spain Avellaneda only saw her stepfather two or three months a year 8 She had two older half siblings from her father s first marriage named Manuel and Gertrudis a younger brother also named Manuel and three younger half siblings from her mother s marriage to Escalada Felipe Josefa and Emilio 6 Little is known about Avellaneda s relationship with her older half siblings b except that they lived somewhere else Her younger brother Manuel was her favorite and she was in charge of her three younger half siblings 6 When she was 13 years old she was betrothed to a distant relative who was one of the wealthiest men in Puerto Principe 6 Her maternal grandfather promised her a fifth of his estate if she went through with this marriage 9 which he had arranged himself 10 At the age of 15 she broke off that engagement against her family s wishes and as a result she was left out of her grandfather s will Her grandfather died in 1832 when she was 17 or 18 1 It is thought that this traumatic experience fueled her hatred of arranged marriages and patriarchal authority and her belief that married women were essentially slaves 6 Her aversion to marriage was also due to the unhappy marriage of her cousin Angelita who was her only friend after she refused to marry the man her family had chosen for her 11 Avellaneda was by her own admission a spoiled child 7 as her family s slaves did all the chores 8 She had a lot of free time which she used to read voraciously 8 One of her tutors was the Cuban poet Jose Maria Heredia 12 Move to Spain Edit By 1836 Escalada had become concerned enough about the possibility of a slave rebellion that he persuaded his wife to sell off her property and slaves and move the family from Cuba to Spain 13 Avellaneda now 22 supported the idea because she wanted to meet her father s relatives in Andalusia 14 The family set sail for Europe on April 9 1836 and arrived in Bordeaux France two months later They spent 18 days there before sailing to A Coruna in Galicia Spain They stayed in A Coruna with Escalada s family for two years 1 Avellaneda was invited into some distinguished social circles in Galicia and in 1837 was engaged to Francisco Ricafort son of Mariano Ricafort the Captain General of Galicia at the time She did not marry him however as she had decided not marry until she was economically independent and her stepfather withheld her inheritance When Francisco was sent to fight in the Carlist Wars she left Galicia to go to Seville with her younger brother Manuel she would never see him again 15 1 She was glad to leave Galicia as she was criticized by Galician women for her refusal to do manual labor and for her love of study 16 She also disliked the damp climate and lack of cultural life 17 In the province of Seville in Andalusia she visited Constantina where her father s family lived 18 In 1839 shortly after her arrival in Seville she met and fell deeply in love with Ignacio de Cepeda y Alcalde a wealthy well educated and socially prominent young man 19 The first man that Avellaneda had a loved was Ignacio de Cepeda who was the focus of many of her writings mainly love letters There were forty love letters total spanning from 1839 until 1854 After his death his widow inherited and published them She also wrote him an autobiography in July 1839 Biographers of Avellaneda have relied too heavily on this account for information about her early life as it was written for a specific purpose to make a good impression on Cepeda 8 For example she said that she was younger than she really was because Cepeda was two years younger than her and she wanted to make herself look as young as possible 20 c Because of the over reliance on this biased source few details are known for certain about the first 22 years of her life 3 The autobiography written to Cepeda was the second of the four autobiographies she wrote during her lifetime the other three were written in 1838 1846 and 1850 respectively 21 Though she loved Cepeda very much he did not want to pursue a marriage with her One reason he gave was that she was not rich enough He also gave reason that she was not feminine enough stating that she was more verbal than should be and was often too aggressive for a woman of the 19th century After her relationship with Cepeda ended she went to Madrid In Madrid she had a number of tumultuous love affairs some with prominent writers associated with Spanish Romanticism Her affairs included several engagements to different men There she met and had an affair with Gabriel Garcia Tassara He was also a poet from Seville In 1844 she had a daughter out of wedlock with Tassara Soon after the baby was born Tassara left her and the baby refusing to call her his daughter The baby died several months later This left Avellaneda heartbroken at the height of her career Avellaneda soon married a youngest man don Pedro Sabater who worked for the Cortes and was very wealthy He was also a writer and wrote many poems for his wife They married on May 10 1846 Sabater was extremely sick with what was believed to be cancer He died shortly after their marriage leaving Avellaneda devastated As a result she entered a convent right after his death and wrote a play called Egilona which did not receive good reviews like her last one had In January 1853 she tried to enroll into the Royal Academy in after a seat belonging to a dead friend Juan Nicasio Gallego of hers became vacant Even though she was admired by many being a woman meant that it was not her place to be writing publicly She was from an upper class family of wealth and recognition it did not give her the fame she desired from writing so easily While all the males in the academy were aware of her works and were fascinated by them they did not give her the right to enter solely on the fact that she was a woman Return to Cuba Edit Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda She remarried on April 26 1855 to a colonel don Domingo Verdugo y Massieu In 1859 due to her husband s injuries they moved from Madrid back to Cuba where both were born They were close to Francisco Serrano who was the captain general of Cuba at the time When she arrived in Cuba she was warmly welcomed with concerts parties and music Shortly after their arrival Verdugo s health worsened and he finally died on October 28 1863 This left her in severe distress and she decided return to Madrid after a few visits to New York London Paris and Seville Final years and death Edit She lived in Madrid her last years Her brother Manuel died in 1868 1 She published the first volume of her collected literary works Spanish Obras literarias omitting the novels Sab and Dos mujeres At 58 she died on February 1 1873 in Madrid 22 but she was buried in Seville with her brother Manuel Literary works EditAl partir Perla del mar Estrella de Occidente Hermosa Cuba Tu brillante cielo la noche cubre con su opaco velo como cubre el dolor mi triste frente Voy a partir La chusma diligente para arrancarme del nativo suelo las velas iza y pronto a su desvelo la brisa acude de tu zona ardiente Adios patria feliz eden querido Doquier que el hado en su furor me impela tu dulce nombre halagara mi oido Adios Ya cruje la turgente vela El ancla se alza el buque estremecido las olas corta y silencioso vuela Al partirOn leaving Pearl of the sea Star of the Occident Beautiful Cuba Night s murky veil Is drawn across the sky s refulgent trail And I succumb to sorrow s ravishment Now I depart As to their labors bent The crewmen now their tasks assail To wrest me from my home they hoist the sail To catch the ardent winds that you have sent Farewell my Eden land so dear Whatever in its furor fate now sends Your cherished name will grace my ear Farewell The anchor from the sea ascends The sails are full The ship breaks clear And with soft quiet motion wave and water fends 4 Gomez de Avellaneda was often either praised or shunned for her literary works She wrote poems autobiographies novels and plays During the 1840s and 1850s was when she was most famous for her writings She had other female rivals in writing such as Carolina Coronado and Rosalia de Castro but none of them achieved as much praise as Gomez de Avellaneda received from her literary works She inspired men and women alike with her stories of love feminism and a changing world Her poetry consists of styles in Hispanic poetry from late neoclassicism through romanticism Her works are influenced by some of the major French English Spanish and Latin American poets Her poems reflects her life experiences including her rebellious attitude and independence in a male dominated society regarding herself as a woman writer sense of loneliness and exile from her Cuba regarding her love for Cuba and melancholy and depression regarding her heartbroken affairs Her poetry surrounds the themes of Cuba love and eroticism poetry itself neoclassical concepts historical references religion philosophical meditations personal and public occasions and poetic portraits The theme of Cuba is evident in her poem Al partir On Leaving which was in 1836 when la Avellaneda was on the boat leaving Cuba for Spain It is a sonnet about her love for Cuba and reflects her emotions as she departed Novels EditThe most controversial and the first novel she wrote Sab was published in 1841 This novel can be compared to Uncle Tom s Cabin in that both novels are literary protests against the practice of slavery Sab is about a Cuban slave named Sab who is in love with Carlota his master s daughter Carlota the heroine marries a rich white Englishman Enrique Otway The book stresses Sab s moral superiority over the white characters This is because his soul is pure while the Englishman s business interests are his primary concern The enterprises of Enrique and his father are juxtaposed against the Carlota s family ingenio sugarcane plantation which is in decline because Carlota s father is of a good nature which means he cannot be a good business man Sab was banned in Cuba for its unconventional approach to society and its problems Avellaneda s works were considered scandalous because of her recurrent themes of interracial love and society s divisions In fact Sab could be considered an early example of negrismo a literary tendency when white creole authors depicted black people usually with a favorable stance This kind of writing was often cultivated by women authors who might have been arguing as Gomez de Avellaneda was that there was a parallel between the black condition and the female condition Two other Creole women who cultivated negrista fiction were the Argentine Juana Manuela Gorriti Peregrinaciones de una alma triste amp El angel caido and the Peruvian Teresa Gonzalez de Fanning whose Roque Moreno paints a less than sympathetic stance toward blacks and mulattoes Of course Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin could also be understood in this light Two famous poems were from her love letters to Ignacio de Cepeda Both were called A el To Him The poems reflect her theme of love for Cepeda The first poem much longer and more complex than the second regards her hope in being with Cepeda However because Cepeda did not want a committed relationship with her and married another woman it made la Avellaneda suffer As a result the second poem is about their final break her resignation to their relationship Source John Charles Chasteen Born in Blood and Fire A Concise History of Latin America Legacy EditThere has been much debate over whether Gertrud s Gomez de Avellaneda is a Cuban or Spanish writer 23 She is widely viewed as the epitome of the Romantic poet the tragic heroine who rises to public acclaim yet in private is bitterly unhappy Whatever the accuracy of this image it is clear that she actively promoted it during her life and that many influential critics and admirers continued to promote this image of Avellaneda after her death 24 Also much of her work is read from a biographical perspective because of the posthumous publication of her love letters to Ignacio Cepeda to the extent that her life has overshadowed the wider cultural significance of her literary output 24 See also Edit Poetry portalSab Cuban literature 1873 in literature 1841 in literatureFootnotes EditNotes Edit In Spanish the term Creole criollo criolla refers to a person of Spanish ancestry who was born in the New World it does not imply that a person is of mixed European and black descent as it does in English 4 She never mentioned her older half siblings in her memoirs 3 Avellaneda consistently shaved a few years off her real age in her autobiographical writings perhaps because of personal vanity and perhaps because she generally had romantic relationships with men who were slightly younger than her 4 Citations Edit a b c d e f Davies 2001 p 201 a b Scott 1993 p xi a b c Davies 2001 p 3 a b Scott 1993 p 149 Davies 2001 p 3 4 a b c d e Davies 2001 p 5 a b Gomez de Avellaneda 1993 p 2 a b c d Davies 2001 p 4 Gomez de Avellaneda 1993 p 7 Gomez de Avellaneda 1993 p 10 Gomez de Avellaneda 1993 p 12 13 Chang Rodriguez amp Filer 2013 p 161 Scott 1993 p xii Davies 2001 p 4 5 Davies 2001 p 10 11 Gomez de Avellaneda 1993 p 17 Scott 1993 p xiiI Davies 2001 p 202 Scott 1993 p xv Scott 1993 p 150 Davies 2001 p 1 2 Davies 2001 p 204 Davies 2001 p 1 a b Davies 2001 p 2 References EditChang Rodriguez Raquel Filer Malva E 2013 Voces de Hispanoamerica antologia literary in Spanish 4th ed Cengage Learning pp 161 162 ISBN 978 1111837921 Davies Catherine 2001 Introduction Sab Hispanic Texts Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719057069 Gomez de Avellaneda Gertrudis 1993 Autobiography Sab and Autobiography The Texas Pan American Series Translated by Scott Nina M University of Texas Press pp 1 23 ISBN 978 0 292 70442 8 Scott Nina M 1993 Introduction Sab and Autobiography The Texas Pan American Series University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70442 8 Further reading EditAlbin Maria C Megan Corbin and Raul Marrero Fente Gertrudis the Great First Abolitionist and Feminist in the Americas and Spain Gender and the Politics of Literature Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Ed Maria C Albin Megan Corbin and Raul Marrero Fente Hispanic Issues On Line 18 2017 1 66 Web Albin Maria C Megan Corbin and Raul Marrero Fente A Transnational Figure Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda and the American Press Gender and the Politics of Literature Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Ed Maria C Albin Megan Corbin and Raul Marrero Fente Hispanic Issues On Line 18 2017 67 133 Web https cla umn edu hispanic issues online Albin Maria C Genero poesia y esfera publica Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda y la tradicion romantica Madrid Trotta 2002 Albin Maria C El costumbrismo feminista los ensayos de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Anales de Literatura Hispanoamericana vol 36 2007 159 170 This articles examines La dama de gran tono 1843 Albin Maria C Romanticismo y fin de siglo Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda y Jose Marti in La literatura iberoamericana en el 2000 Balances perspectivas y prospectivas Ed Carmen Ruiz Barrionuevo Salamanca Universidad de Salamanca Spain 2004 Albin Maria C El genio femenino y la autoridad literaria Luisa Molina de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Atenea 490 2004 115 130 Albin Maria C El cristianismo y la nueva imagen de la mujer la figura historica de Maria en los ensayos de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda In Perspectivas transatlanticas Estudios coloniales hispanoamericanos Ed Raul Marrero Fente Madrid Verbum 2004 315 353 Albin Maria C Paisaje y politica en la poesia de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Romance Notes XLI 2000 25 35 Albin Maria C Fronteras de genero nacion y ciudadania La Ilustracion Album de las Damas 1845 de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda in Actas del XIII Congreso de la Asociacion Internacional de Hispanistas Madrid Castalia 2000 67 75 This article examines Capacidad de las mujeres para el gobierno 1845 Albin Maria C Genero imperio y colonia en la poesia de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Romance Languages Annual 10 1999 419 425 Albin Maria C La revista Album de Gomez de Avellaneda La esfera publica y la critica a la modernidad Cincinnati Romance Review 14 1995 73 79 Albin Maria C Ante el Niagara Heredia Sagra Gomez de Avellaneda y el proyecto modernizador in Tradicion y actualidad de la literatura iberoamericana Ed Pamela Bacarisse Vol 1 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 1995 2 vols 69 78 Gomez de Avellaneda Gertrudis Cuadernillos de viaje y La dama de gran tono Compilacion introduccion y notas Manuel Lorenzo Abdala Los libros de Umsaloua Sevilla 2014 ISBN 978 84 942070 5 1 Castagnaro R Anthony The Early Spanish American Novel New York Las Americas 1971 The Anti Slavery Theme 157 168 Engle Margarita The Lightning Dreamer Cuba s Greatest Abolitionist Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2013 Fernandez Medina Nicolas The Artful Provocateur Avellaneda s Sab in Readings of Nation Race and Color Torre de Papel XII 3 2002 36 48 Fox Lockert Lucia Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Sab 1841 Women Novelists in Spain and Spanish America Metuchen N J The Scarecrow Press 1979 Gold Janet N The Feminine Bond Victimization and Beyond in the Novels of Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Spanish American Literature From Romanticism to Modernismo in Latin America Eds David William Foster amp Daniel Altamiranda New York Garland Publishing Co 1997 91 98 Harter Hugh A Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Boston Twayne Publishers 1981 Harter Hugh A Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Spanish American Women Writers Ed Diane E Marting Westport Greenwood Press 1990 pp 210 225 Hart Stephen M Is Women s Writing in Spanish America Gender Specific MLN 110 1995 335 352 Examines Gomez de Avellaneda in a context with other Latin American women authors Kirkpatrick Susan Feminizing the Romantic Subject in Narrative Gomez de Avellaneda Las Romanticas Women Writers and Subjectivity in Spain 1835 1850 Berkeley University of California Press 1989 Kirkpatrick Susan Gomez de Avellaneda s Sab Gendering the Liberal Romantic Subject In the Feminine Mode Essays on Hispanic Women Writers Eds Noel Valis and Carol Maier Lewisburg Bucknell University press 1990 115 130 Lazo Raimundo Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Havana Cuba Editorial Porrua S A 1972 Lindstrom Naomi Early Spanish American Narrative Austin University of Texas Press 2004 sobre Gomez de Avellaneda 99 103 Mata Kolster Elba Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda 1814 1873 Latin American Writers Vol I Ed Sole Abreu NY Charles Scribner s Sons 1989 pp 175 180 Miller Beth Gertrude the Great Avellaneda Nineteenth Century Feminist Women in Hispanic Literature Icons and Fallen Idols Ed Beth Miller Berkeley University of California Press 1983 Pastor Brigida A Romance Life in Novel Fiction The Early Career and Works of Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Bulletin of Hispanic Studies LXXV No 2 1998 169 181 Santos Nelly E Las ideas feministas de Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Spanish American Literature From Romanticism to Modernismo in Latin America Eds David William Foster amp Daniel Altamiranda New York amp London Garland 1997 100 105 Schlau Stacey Stranger in a Strange Land The Discourse of Alienation in Gomez de Avellaneda s Abolitionist Novel Sab Hispania 69 3 September 1986 495 503 Scott Nina Shoring up the Weaker Sex Avellaneda and Nineteenth Century Gender Ideology Reinterpreting the Spanish American Essay Women Writers of the 19th and 20th Centuries Ed Doris Meyer Austin University of Texas 1995 57 67 Solow Barbara L ed Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1991 Sommer Doris Sab C est Moi Foundational Fictions The National Romances of Latin America Berkeley University of California Press 1991 Various authors Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda 1814 1873 Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism Volume 111 Ed Lynn M Zott Detroit Thomson Gale 2002 1 76 Ward Thomas Nature and Civilization in Sab and the Nineteenth Century Novel in Latin America Hispanofila 126 1999 25 40 Vittorio Caratozzolo Il teatro di Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Il Capitello del Sole Bologna p 352 2002 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda 1814 1873 Archived 2011 07 09 at the Wayback Machine Gomez de Avellaneda Works by or about Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda at Internet Archive Works by Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda amp oldid 1138367345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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