fbpx
Wikipedia

Ramón del Valle-Inclán

Ramón María del Valle-Inclán y de la Peña (born in Vilanova de Arousa,[1] Galicia, Spain, on 28 October 1866 –died in Santiago de Compostela on 5 January 1936) was a Spanish dramatist, novelist, and member of the Spanish Generation of 98. He is considered perhaps the most noteworthy and certainly the most radical dramatist to have worked to subvert the traditionalism of the Spanish theatrical establishment in the early part of the 20th century.[by whom?] His influence on later generations of Spanish dramatists makes his drama even more significant. He is honored on National Theatre Day with a statue in Madrid that receives homage from the theatrical profession.

Valle-Inclán
Valle-Inclán, photographed by Pau Audouard in 1911
BornRamón María del Valle-Inclán
(1866-10-28)28 October 1866
Vilanova de Arousa, Pontevedra, Kingdom of Spain
Died5 January 1936(1936-01-05) (aged 69)
Santiago de Compostela, Second Spanish Republic
OccupationDramatist and novelist
LanguageSpanish
NationalitySpanish
Genres
Literary movement
SpouseJosefa María Ángela Blanco Tejerina
Children
6
  • María de la Concepción (1908)
  • Joaquín María Baltasar (1914-1914)
  • Carlos Luis Baltasar (1917-2006)
  • María de la Encarnación Beatriz Baltasar Mariquiña (1919-2003)
  • Jaime Baltasar Clemente (1922-1985)
  • Ana María Antonia Baltasar (1924)
Statue on the Paseo de Recoletos in Madrid, by Francisco Toledo Sánchez (1972)

Biography Edit

Ramón María del Valle-Inclán was the second son of Ramón Valle-Inclán Bermúdez and Dolores de la Peña y Montenegro.

As a child he lived in Vilanova and A Pobra do Caramiñal, and then he moved to Pontevedra in order to study high school. In 1888 he started to study law at University of Santiago de Compostela, and there he published his first story, Babel, at the Café con gotas magazine.[2] He left his studies and moved to Madrid in 1890, where he wrote for various periodical newspapers such as El Globo, La Ilustración Ibérica or El Heraldo de Madrid.

In 1892 he traveled to Mexico, where he wrote for El Universal, El Correo Español and El Veracruza

In 1893, he returned to Pontevedra, where he wrote his first book, Femeninas (Feminine), published in 1895.

In 1895, he moved to Madrid again, working as an official at the Ministry of Public Instruction and Fine Arts. In Madrid he did some translations of José Maria de Eça de Queirós, Alexandre Dumas, Gabriele D'Annunzio, Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, Paul Alexis and Matilde Serao. In spite of his economic difficulties, he started to have a name in the tertulias (literary gatherings) of many culturally significant coffeehouses in Madrid, such as Café Gijón, and to be noticed for his dandy attitude and his eccentric looks. His hot temper got him involved in various affrays. Because one of those, at Café de la Montaña in 1899, an unfortunate stick wound by writer Manuel Bueno caused one of his cufflinks to inlay in his arm. The wound produced gangrene, and Valle-Inclán had his arm amputated. That same year of 1899, he met Rubén Darío, and both of them became good friends. At that time, he published his first theater play, Cenizas (Ashes), and he started a very prolific literary period.

In 1907 he married the actress Josefina Blanco Tejerina.

In 1910 he traveled for six months to various Latin American countries (Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia) escorting his wife on an acting tour.

In 1913 he returned to Galicia, and set his residence in Cambados. Then, after the death of his second son, he moved to A Pobra do Caramiñal.

In 1916 he published in the Cuban magazine Labor Gallega a poem in Galician language with the title of Cantiga de vellas (Son of old women), which is his most valuable contribution to Galician literature.

During World War I, he supported the allied army, visiting the front in various occasions as a war correspondent for El Imparcial.

In 1921 he traveled to México again, invited by the President of the Republic, Álvaro Obregón. There he participated in many literary and cultural events, and got conquered by the Mexican Revolution. On his way back to Spain, he spent two weeks in Havana, and two weeks in New York City. That same year, 1921, he was appointed President of the International Federation of Latin American Intellectuals.

He returned to Spain at the end of 1921, and there he started to write Tirano Banderas (Tyrant Banderas). He went back to Madrid in 1922, still inflamed by the spirit of the Mexican Revolution.

Since 1924 he showed his opposition to Miguel Primo de Rivera's dictatorship.

With the arrival of the Second Spanish Republic, he ran in the elections with the Partido Radical of Alejandro Lerroux, but he did not get a seat.

In 1932 he divorced his wife, and he was appointed Director of the Museum of Aranjuez[3] and President of the Ateneo of Madrid. Also, the government of the Second Spanish Republic appointed him Curator of the National Artistic Heritage,[4] but his confrontations with the Ministry because of the bad state of the palaces and museums under his direction forced his resigning.

In 1933 he was the director of the Spanish Academy of Fine Arts in Rome, Italy.[5]

He died in Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain, on January 5, 1936.

Works Edit

His early writings were in line with French symbolism and modernism; however, his later evolution took his works to more radical formal experiments. He despised literary realism and openly disregarded Benito Pérez Galdós, its most prominent Spanish representative.[6] His political views, accordingly, changed from traditional absolutism (in Spain known as Carlismo) towards anarchism. This also caused him problems.

All his life he struggled to live up to his bohemian ideals, and stayed loyal to his aestheticist beliefs. However, he had to write undercover for serialised popular novels.

Works by Valle-Inclán such as Divine Words (Divinas palabras) and Bohemian Lights (Luces de Bohemia) attack what he saw as the hypocrisy, moralising and sentimentality of the bourgeois playwrights, satirise the views of the ruling classes and target particular concepts such as masculine honour, militarism, patriotism and servile attitudes toward the Crown and the Roman Catholic Church. His dramas also featured irreverent portrays of figures from Spain's political past and deployed crude, obscene language and vulgar imagery in a mocking attack on theatrical blandness.

In addition to being politically subversive, though, Valle-Inclán's plays often required staging and direction that went far beyond the abilities of many companies working in the commercial theatre, often featuring complex supernatural special effects and rapid, drastic changes of scene. For this reason, some of his works are regarded as closet dramas.

Valle-Inclán also wrote major novels including the Tyrant Banderas (Tirano Banderas), which was influential on the Latin American 'dictator' novel (for example, I, the Supreme by Augusto Roa Bastos), although it was received with disdain by many Latin American authors. Rufino Blanco Fombona, for example, pokes fun of "the America of tambourine" ("la América de pandereta") of that novel where you could be in the jungle one day and the Andes the next. Some critics view him as being the Spanish equivalent to James Joyce; however, due to a lack of translations his work is still largely unknown in the English-speaking world, although his reputation is slowly growing as translations are produced.

Diego Martínez Torrón has studied and published El ruedo ibérico, the first annotated edition of this work, a lot of unpublished manuscripts of this work.[7][8]

Plays Edit

  • Cenizas. Drama en tres actos (1899)
  • El marqués de Bradomín. Coloquios románticos (1907)
  • Águila de blasón. Comedia bárbara (1907)
  • Romance de lobos. Comedia bárbara (1908)
  • El yermo de las almas (1908)
  • Farsa infantil de la cabeza del dragón (1909)
  • Cuento de abril. Escenas rimadas en una manera extravagante (1910)
  • Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza (1910)
  • Voces de gesta. Tragedia pastoril (1911)
  • El embrujado. Tragedia de tierras de Salnés (1913).
  • La marquesa Rosalinda. Farsa sentimental y grotesca (1913)
  • Divine Words-Divinas palabras. Tragicomedia de aldea (1919)
  • Farsa italiana de la enamorada del rey (1920)
  • Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza (2nd edition, 1920)
  • Bohemian Lights-Luces de bohemia. Esperpento (1920) (12 scenes)
  • Silver Face Cara de Plata. Comedia bárbara (1922)
  • ¿Para cuándo son las reclamaciones diplomáticas? (1922)
  • Bohemian Lights-Luces de bohemia. Esperpento (2nd edition, enhanced, 1924) (15 scenes)
  • La rosa de papel. Novela macabra (1924)
  • La cabeza del Bautista. Novela macabra (1924)
  • Los cuernos de don Friolera. Esperpento (1925)
  • Tablado de marionetas para educación de príncipes (1926). Contains: Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza, Farsa italiana de la enamorada del rey, Farsa infantil de la cabeza del dragón
  • El terno del difunto (1926) (renamed as Las galas del difunto in 1930)
  • Ligazón. Auto para siluetas (1926)
  • La hija del capitán. Esperpento (1927)
  • Sacrilegio. Auto para siluetas (1927)
  • Retablo de la avaricia, la lujuria y la muerte (1927). Contains: Ligazón. Auto para siluetas, La rosa de papel, La cabeza del Bautista, El embrujado, Sacrilegio. Auto para siluetas
  • Martes de Carnaval. Esperpentos (1930). Contains: Las galas del difunto (El terno del difunto), Los cuernos de don Friolera. Esperpento, La hija del capitán. Esperpento

Prose Edit

  • The Pleasant Memoirs of the Marquis de BradomínSonatas: Memorias del Marqués de Bradomín
    • Spring and Summer SonatasSonata de primavera y Sonata de estío (1904 and 1903)
    • Autumn and Winter SonatasSonata de otoño y Sonata de invierno (1902 and 1905)
  • Flor de santidad (1904)
  • La pipa de kif (lyric poem) (1919)
  • Tyrant BanderasTirano Banderas (1926)
  • Mr Punch the Cuckold
  • The Lamp of Marvels

Adaptations Edit

Film Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Francisco Madrid, La vida altiva de Valle-Inclán, Buenos Aires, Poseidón, 1943.
  • Robert Lima, Ramón del Valle-Inclán, New York, Columbia University Press, 1972.
  • Robert Lima, Valle-Inclán: The Theatre of His Life, Columbia, University Press of Missouri, 1988.
  • Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, Scenes from World Literature and Portraits of Greatest Authors, illustrated by Willi Glasauer, Barcelona, Spain, Círculo de Lectores [es], 1988.
  • Robert Lima, Valle-Inclán: El teatro de su vida, Santiago de Compostela—Vigo, Editorial Nigra, 1995.
  • María Fernanda Sánchez Colomer Ruiz, Valle-Inclán Orador, Doctoral Thesis, Departament de Filolgia Espanyola, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, 2002.
  • Manuel Aznar Soler y Ma. Fernanda Sánchez Colomer, eds. Valle-Inclán en el siglo XXI, Proceedings from the Second International Congress, November 20–22, 2002 at the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona.
  • Paz Sáenz, ed. (1988). Narratives from the Silver Age. Translated by Hughes, Victoria; Richmond, Carolyn. Madrid: Iberia. ISBN 84-87093-04-3.
  • Robert Lima, The Dramatic World of Valle-Inclán, Woodbridge, England, Tamesis, 2003.
  • Robert Lima, The International Bibliography of Studies on the Life and Works of Ramón del Valle-Inclán, Pennsylvania State University, The Orlando Press, 2008. ISBN 9780940804012

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ G., A. (October 25, 2014). ""Cuadrante" profundiza en los orígenes de Valle-Inclán y ahora se presenta en Roma". Faro de Vigo (in Spanish). Vilanova. Retrieved February 14, 2018. Hace quince años nació la revista Cuadrante, un proyecto monográfico centrado en divulgar la obra y la biografía del mayor genio nacido en Vilanova de Arousa, Ramón María del Valle-Inclán.
  2. ^ AUBRUN, Charles V. «Les débuts littéraires de Valle-Inclán». At: Bulletin Hispanique. Annales de la Faculté des Lettres de Bourdeaux, 1955, vol. 57, n. 3, pp. 331-333. ISSN 0007-4640. eISSN 1775-3821.
  3. ^ MINISTERIO DE INSTRUCCIÓN PÚBLICA Y BELLAS ARTES. «Decreto, de 27 de enero de 1932, encargando al Conservador general del Tesoro Artístico Nacional la organización, como Museo, del que fue Real Sitio de Aranjuez». At: Gaceta de Madrid, 29 January 1932, n. 29, p.732. Ref. 1932/00725.
  4. ^ MINISTERIO DE INSTRUCCIÓN PÚBLICA Y BELLAS ARTES. Decreto nombrando a D. Ramón del Valle Inclán Conservador general del Tesoro Artístico Nacional. At: Gaceta de Madrid, 2 september 1931, n. 245, p. 1595. Ref. 1931/07313.
  5. ^ MINISTERIO DE ESTADO. «Decreto, de 8 de marzo de 1933, nombrando Director de la Academia Española de Bellas Artes de Roma a D. Ramón María del Valle Inclán». At: Gaceta de Madrid, 11 March 1933, n. 70, p. 1898.,
  6. ^ Gilman, Stephen (1961). "La palabra hablada y "Fortunata y Jacinta"". Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica. 15 (3/4): 542–560. doi:10.24201/nrfh.v15i3/4.391. JSTOR 40297550.
  7. ^ Ramón del Valle-Inclán, El ruedo ibérico, edición de Diego Martinez Torron, Madrid, Catedra, 2017 (Letras Hispanicas, 772); Second amplified edition 2021.
  8. ^ Ramón del Valle-Inclán, Manuscritos inéditos de "El ruedo ibérico", Sevilla, Renacimiento/UCOpress Editorial Universidad de Córdoba, 2019 (Col. Los Cuatro Vientos, 154)

External links Edit

  • Works by Ramón del Valle-Inclán at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Ramón del Valle-Inclán at Internet Archive
  • Works by Ramón del Valle-Inclán at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Ramón María del Valle-Inclán at Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes
  • Biography and bibliography of Ramón María del Valle-Inclán at Escritores.org
  • Curiosities about Valle-Inclán
  • Review of the play "Divinas palabras" by Spain's Centro Dramático Nacional in the New York Times, 2007
  • House-Museum in A Pobra do Caramiñal
  • House-Museum in Vilanova de Arousa

ramón, valle, inclán, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, a. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ramon del Valle Inclan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is del Valle Inclan and the second or maternal family name is de la Pena Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan y de la Pena born in Vilanova de Arousa 1 Galicia Spain on 28 October 1866 died in Santiago de Compostela on 5 January 1936 was a Spanish dramatist novelist and member of the Spanish Generation of 98 He is considered perhaps the most noteworthy and certainly the most radical dramatist to have worked to subvert the traditionalism of the Spanish theatrical establishment in the early part of the 20th century by whom His influence on later generations of Spanish dramatists makes his drama even more significant He is honored on National Theatre Day with a statue in Madrid that receives homage from the theatrical profession Valle InclanValle Inclan photographed by Pau Audouard in 1911BornRamon Maria del Valle Inclan 1866 10 28 28 October 1866Vilanova de Arousa Pontevedra Kingdom of SpainDied5 January 1936 1936 01 05 aged 69 Santiago de Compostela Second Spanish RepublicOccupationDramatist and novelistLanguageSpanishNationalitySpanishGenresTheaterNovelPoetryLiterary movementGeneration of 98Decadent movementSpouseJosefa Maria Angela Blanco TejerinaChildren6 Maria de la Concepcion 1908 Joaquin Maria Baltasar 1914 1914 Carlos Luis Baltasar 1917 2006 Maria de la Encarnacion Beatriz Baltasar Mariquina 1919 2003 Jaime Baltasar Clemente 1922 1985 Ana Maria Antonia Baltasar 1924 Statue on the Paseo de Recoletos in Madrid by Francisco Toledo Sanchez 1972 Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 2 1 Plays 2 2 Prose 3 Adaptations 3 1 Film 4 Further reading 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available January 2023 Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan was the second son of Ramon Valle Inclan Bermudez and Dolores de la Pena y Montenegro As a child he lived in Vilanova and A Pobra do Caraminal and then he moved to Pontevedra in order to study high school In 1888 he started to study law at University of Santiago de Compostela and there he published his first story Babel at the Cafe con gotas magazine 2 He left his studies and moved to Madrid in 1890 where he wrote for various periodical newspapers such as El Globo La Ilustracion Iberica or El Heraldo de Madrid In 1892 he traveled to Mexico where he wrote for El Universal El Correo Espanol and El VeracruzaIn 1893 he returned to Pontevedra where he wrote his first book Femeninas Feminine published in 1895 In 1895 he moved to Madrid again working as an official at the Ministry of Public Instruction and Fine Arts In Madrid he did some translations of Jose Maria de Eca de Queiros Alexandre Dumas Gabriele D Annunzio Jules Barbey d Aurevilly Paul Alexis and Matilde Serao In spite of his economic difficulties he started to have a name in the tertulias literary gatherings of many culturally significant coffeehouses in Madrid such as Cafe Gijon and to be noticed for his dandy attitude and his eccentric looks His hot temper got him involved in various affrays Because one of those at Cafe de la Montana in 1899 an unfortunate stick wound by writer Manuel Bueno caused one of his cufflinks to inlay in his arm The wound produced gangrene and Valle Inclan had his arm amputated That same year of 1899 he met Ruben Dario and both of them became good friends At that time he published his first theater play Cenizas Ashes and he started a very prolific literary period In 1907 he married the actress Josefina Blanco Tejerina In 1910 he traveled for six months to various Latin American countries Argentina Chile Paraguay Uruguay and Bolivia escorting his wife on an acting tour In 1913 he returned to Galicia and set his residence in Cambados Then after the death of his second son he moved to A Pobra do Caraminal In 1916 he published in the Cuban magazine Labor Gallega a poem in Galician language with the title of Cantiga de vellas Son of old women which is his most valuable contribution to Galician literature During World War I he supported the allied army visiting the front in various occasions as a war correspondent for El Imparcial In 1921 he traveled to Mexico again invited by the President of the Republic Alvaro Obregon There he participated in many literary and cultural events and got conquered by the Mexican Revolution On his way back to Spain he spent two weeks in Havana and two weeks in New York City That same year 1921 he was appointed President of the International Federation of Latin American Intellectuals He returned to Spain at the end of 1921 and there he started to write Tirano Banderas Tyrant Banderas He went back to Madrid in 1922 still inflamed by the spirit of the Mexican Revolution Since 1924 he showed his opposition to Miguel Primo de Rivera s dictatorship With the arrival of the Second Spanish Republic he ran in the elections with the Partido Radical of Alejandro Lerroux but he did not get a seat In 1932 he divorced his wife and he was appointed Director of the Museum of Aranjuez 3 and President of the Ateneo of Madrid Also the government of the Second Spanish Republic appointed him Curator of the National Artistic Heritage 4 but his confrontations with the Ministry because of the bad state of the palaces and museums under his direction forced his resigning In 1933 he was the director of the Spanish Academy of Fine Arts in Rome Italy 5 He died in Santiago de Compostela Galicia Spain on January 5 1936 Works EditHis early writings were in line with French symbolism and modernism however his later evolution took his works to more radical formal experiments He despised literary realism and openly disregarded Benito Perez Galdos its most prominent Spanish representative 6 His political views accordingly changed from traditional absolutism in Spain known as Carlismo towards anarchism This also caused him problems All his life he struggled to live up to his bohemian ideals and stayed loyal to his aestheticist beliefs However he had to write undercover for serialised popular novels Works by Valle Inclan such as Divine Words Divinas palabras and Bohemian Lights Luces de Bohemia attack what he saw as the hypocrisy moralising and sentimentality of the bourgeois playwrights satirise the views of the ruling classes and target particular concepts such as masculine honour militarism patriotism and servile attitudes toward the Crown and the Roman Catholic Church His dramas also featured irreverent portrays of figures from Spain s political past and deployed crude obscene language and vulgar imagery in a mocking attack on theatrical blandness In addition to being politically subversive though Valle Inclan s plays often required staging and direction that went far beyond the abilities of many companies working in the commercial theatre often featuring complex supernatural special effects and rapid drastic changes of scene For this reason some of his works are regarded as closet dramas Valle Inclan also wrote major novels including the Tyrant Banderas Tirano Banderas which was influential on the Latin American dictator novel for example I the Supreme by Augusto Roa Bastos although it was received with disdain by many Latin American authors Rufino Blanco Fombona for example pokes fun of the America of tambourine la America de pandereta of that novel where you could be in the jungle one day and the Andes the next Some critics view him as being the Spanish equivalent to James Joyce however due to a lack of translations his work is still largely unknown in the English speaking world although his reputation is slowly growing as translations are produced Diego Martinez Torron has studied and published El ruedo iberico the first annotated edition of this work a lot of unpublished manuscripts of this work 7 8 Plays Edit Cenizas Drama en tres actos 1899 El marques de Bradomin Coloquios romanticos 1907 Aguila de blason Comedia barbara 1907 Romance de lobos Comedia barbara 1908 El yermo de las almas 1908 Farsa infantil de la cabeza del dragon 1909 Cuento de abril Escenas rimadas en una manera extravagante 1910 Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza 1910 Voces de gesta Tragedia pastoril 1911 El embrujado Tragedia de tierras de Salnes 1913 La marquesa Rosalinda Farsa sentimental y grotesca 1913 Divine Words Divinas palabras Tragicomedia de aldea 1919 Farsa italiana de la enamorada del rey 1920 Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza 2nd edition 1920 Bohemian Lights Luces de bohemia Esperpento 1920 12 scenes Silver Face Cara de Plata Comedia barbara 1922 Para cuando son las reclamaciones diplomaticas 1922 Bohemian Lights Luces de bohemia Esperpento 2nd edition enhanced 1924 15 scenes La rosa de papel Novela macabra 1924 La cabeza del Bautista Novela macabra 1924 Los cuernos de don Friolera Esperpento 1925 Tablado de marionetas para educacion de principes 1926 Contains Farsa y licencia de la Reina Castiza Farsa italiana de la enamorada del rey Farsa infantil de la cabeza del dragon El terno del difunto 1926 renamed as Las galas del difunto in 1930 Ligazon Auto para siluetas 1926 La hija del capitan Esperpento 1927 Sacrilegio Auto para siluetas 1927 Retablo de la avaricia la lujuria y la muerte 1927 Contains Ligazon Auto para siluetas La rosa de papel La cabeza del Bautista El embrujado Sacrilegio Auto para siluetas Martes de Carnaval Esperpentos 1930 Contains Las galas del difunto El terno del difunto Los cuernos de don Friolera Esperpento La hija del capitan EsperpentoProse Edit The Pleasant Memoirs of the Marquis de Bradomin Sonatas Memorias del Marques de Bradomin Spring and Summer Sonatas Sonata de primavera y Sonata de estio 1904 and 1903 Autumn and Winter Sonatas Sonata de otono y Sonata de invierno 1902 and 1905 Flor de santidad 1904 La pipa de kif lyric poem 1919 Tyrant Banderas Tirano Banderas 1926 Mr Punch the Cuckold The Lamp of MarvelsAdaptations EditFilm Edit 1948 L Amore second episode based on Flor de santidad 1959 Sonatas based on Sonatas Memorias del Marques de Bradomin 1973 Flor de santidad 1976 Beatriz based on Beatriz y Mi hermana Antonia 1977 Divinas palabras 1985 Luces de bohemia 1987 Divinas palabras 1993 Banderas the TyrantFurther reading EditFrancisco Madrid La vida altiva de Valle Inclan Buenos Aires Poseidon 1943 Robert Lima Ramon del Valle Inclan New York Columbia University Press 1972 Robert Lima Valle Inclan The Theatre of His Life Columbia University Press of Missouri 1988 Manuel Vazquez Montalban Scenes from World Literature and Portraits of Greatest Authors illustrated by Willi Glasauer Barcelona Spain Circulo de Lectores es 1988 Robert Lima Valle Inclan El teatro de su vida Santiago de Compostela Vigo Editorial Nigra 1995 Maria Fernanda Sanchez Colomer Ruiz Valle Inclan Orador Doctoral Thesis Departament de Filolgia Espanyola Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona 2002 Manuel Aznar Soler y Ma Fernanda Sanchez Colomer eds Valle Inclan en el siglo XXI Proceedings from the Second International Congress November 20 22 2002 at the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona Paz Saenz ed 1988 Narratives from the Silver Age Translated by Hughes Victoria Richmond Carolyn Madrid Iberia ISBN 84 87093 04 3 Robert Lima The Dramatic World of Valle Inclan Woodbridge England Tamesis 2003 Robert Lima The International Bibliography of Studies on the Life and Works of Ramon del Valle Inclan Pennsylvania State University The Orlando Press 2008 ISBN 9780940804012See also EditCafe Gijon Madrid Esperpento Plaza de las Cinco CallesReferences Edit G A October 25 2014 Cuadrante profundiza en los origenes de Valle Inclan y ahora se presenta en Roma Faro de Vigo in Spanish Vilanova Retrieved February 14 2018 Hace quince anos nacio la revista Cuadrante un proyecto monografico centrado en divulgar la obra y la biografia del mayor genio nacido en Vilanova de Arousa Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan AUBRUN Charles V Les debuts litteraires de Valle Inclan At Bulletin Hispanique Annales de la Faculte des Lettres de Bourdeaux 1955 vol 57 n 3 pp 331 333 ISSN 0007 4640 eISSN 1775 3821 MINISTERIO DE INSTRUCCIoN PUBLICA Y BELLAS ARTES Decreto de 27 de enero de 1932 encargando al Conservador general del Tesoro Artistico Nacional la organizacion como Museo del que fue Real Sitio de Aranjuez At Gaceta de Madrid 29 January 1932 n 29 p 732 Ref 1932 00725 MINISTERIO DE INSTRUCCIoN PUBLICA Y BELLAS ARTES Decreto nombrando a D Ramon del Valle Inclan Conservador general del Tesoro Artistico Nacional At Gaceta de Madrid 2 september 1931 n 245 p 1595 Ref 1931 07313 MINISTERIO DE ESTADO Decreto de 8 de marzo de 1933 nombrando Director de la Academia Espanola de Bellas Artes de Roma a D Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan At Gaceta de Madrid 11 March 1933 n 70 p 1898 Gilman Stephen 1961 La palabra hablada y Fortunata y Jacinta Nueva Revista de Filologia Hispanica 15 3 4 542 560 doi 10 24201 nrfh v15i3 4 391 JSTOR 40297550 Ramon del Valle Inclan El ruedo iberico edicion de Diego Martinez Torron Madrid Catedra 2017 Letras Hispanicas 772 Second amplified edition 2021 Ramon del Valle Inclan Manuscritos ineditos de El ruedo iberico Sevilla Renacimiento UCOpress Editorial Universidad de Cordoba 2019 Col Los Cuatro Vientos 154 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ramon del Valle Inclan Works by Ramon del Valle Inclan at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Ramon del Valle Inclan at Internet Archive Works by Ramon del Valle Inclan at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan at Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Biography and bibliography of Ramon Maria del Valle Inclan at Escritores org Curiosities about Valle Inclan Review of the play Divinas palabras by Spain s Centro Dramatico Nacional in the New York Times 2007 House Museum in A Pobra do Caraminal House Museum in Vilanova de Arousa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ramon del Valle Inclan amp oldid 1176588094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.