Novísimos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Novísimos were a poetic group in Spain who took their name from an anthology in which the Catalan critic José María Castellet gathered the work of the majority of the youngest and most experimental poets in the decade of the 1970s: Nueve novísimos poetas españoles (Nine Very New Spanish Poets), Barcelona, 1970. Nevertheless, they were often referred to as the "venecianos" (Venetians), in allusion to one of the poems in the anthology, Oda a Venecia ante el mar de los teatros ("Ode to Venice in front of the theatre sea") by Pere Gimferrer.

This anthology was the birth certificate of the poetic group, and it appeared divided in two sections:

The group's characteristics are:

  1. Absolute formal freedom.
  2. Automatic writing, and various techniques such as ellipsis, syncope and collage.
  3. Introduction of exotic elements, artifices.
  4. Influence from the mass media and cinema.
  5. Influence from popular culture and popular myths: music, mainstream cinema, comic strips. (A kind of literary pop influenced by the aesthetics of Andy Warhol.)

Their literary formation was fundamentally foreign and cosmopolitan, which meant:

  1. Rejection of the immediate Spanish tradition, with the exceptions of Vicente Aleixandre, Luis Cernuda and Jaime Gil de Biedma.
  2. Discovery of the "damned" writers in the Spanish language: Octavio Paz, José Lezama Lima and the Baroque writers such as Francisco de Quevedo and Luis de Góngora among many others.
  3. Studying of the culturalists T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, of Kavafis, Saint-John Perse, Wallace Stevens and the French surrealists.
  4. Restoration of Rubén Darío's modernism.

The poetics included in the anthology declare, above all, the primacy of language and style, and express an enormous scepticism in the value of poetry and in the occupation of the poet. "Poetry is useless" would be the slogan that better defines the attitude of this group in 1970.

Basically, two tendencies coexisted inside the group: the culturalist (Guillermo Carnero, José María Álvarez, Pere Gimferrer), and the tendency connected to pop aesthetic, counterculture or pop culture (Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, Leopoldo María Panero).

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.