Agustín Acosta y Bello
(Matanzas, 1886-Miami, 1976) Cuban writer belonging to the group of postmodernist poets of the 1920s, who somewhat anticipated the artistic and social upheavals of the decade later.
He obtained his doctorate in civil law and established himself as a notary in the city of Jagüey Grande (Matanzas).After suffering an imprisonment under the G.Machado regime, which kept him inactive for a time, with the change of government he was appointed provisional governor of Matanzas (1933-1934).Since then, he held various political positions, while participating in various newspapers and magazines such as Letras, El Fígaro, Diario de la Marina, El cubano libre, Ariel and Archipiélago among others..He left the country in 1973.
Regarding his literary activity, in addition to the aforementioned collaborations, it is worth mentioning his essays and biographies that remain unpublished, on Ch.Baudelaire, A.de Lamartine and P.Verlaine among the most prominent.With Ala (1915) and Hermanita (1923) he inaugurated his publications, which continued in 1926 with La zafra , poems about rural work far from the bucolic to use and that denounced the economic exploitation suffered by the peasants.
Acosta opted for the aesthetics of postmodernism, without joining any of the avant-garde currents that followed him.An example of this formal rigor is "La miseria divina", which belongs to the mature book The distant camels (1936).Other later works were Last moments (1941), The desolate islands (1943), Jesús (1957) and Iron roads (1963).
Comments
Post a Comment