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Juan Ramón Jiménez (1881-1958)

 

Spanish poet who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1956. Jiménez made his birthplace, Moguer in Southern Spain, famous by his series of prose poems of a young writer and his donkey, PLATERO Y YO (1914, Platero and I), one of the classics of modern Spanish literature. Jiménez's early work was ornamental, romantic, and often filled with dreams of love. During his second period, from 1917, he wrote "naked" poetry, in which the images were reduced to their essence. A central theme in Jiménez's work was the oneness and beauty of the world.

¡Intelijencia, dáme
el nombre exacto de las cosas!
... Que mi palabra sea
la cosa misma,
creada por mi alma nuevamente.
(...)
(from '¡Intelijencia, dáme')

Juan Ramón Jiménez was born in Moguer, the son of Victor Jiménez y Jiménez, a banker, and Purificación Mantecón y Lopez Parejo. Jiménez began to write early, producing his first poems at the age of seven. He attended a Jesuit Academy in Cádiz (1891-96), and then studied law at the University of Seville, showing there an interest in painting. However, Jiménez soon abandoned his studies, and also stopped painting, to devote himself entirely to literature.

Jiménez's first two books drew from the fin de siècle decadence. In 1900 he was invited to Madrid by the poets Francisco Villaespesa and Rubén Darío, who had seen his verses in Vida nueva, a Madrid review. He became a member of the modernist literary circles and founded two literary reviews, Helios (1902) and Renacimiento (1906). Helios appeared for only one year, but it has much cultural-historical importance due to Jiménez's work.

When Jiménez's father died in 1900, he fell into a depression and returned to Moguer. His preoccupation with death lasted the rest of his life. Poetry, the experience of beauty, became for him a means of struggling against nothingness. To recover from his first bout of mental illness, Jiménez was sent to a sanatorium in France. Between the ages 24 and 31 he published nine volumes of poetry. Later he also revised early verses, trying to find perfection of expression, but knowing he would never reach it. Among the early collections were ALMAS DE VIOLETA, NINFEAS, both from 1900, RIMAS (1902), ARIAS TRISTES (1903), JARDINES LEJANOS (1904), and PASTORALES (1905). These works reveal the poet's mastery of metaphor and skill in capturing impressionistic images of nature. Impressionism also fascinated him in painting and he often listened Beethoven's VIth symphony and piano sonatas.

From 1905 to 1911 Jiménez lived in Moguer and wrote several collections of poetry. In ELEGÍAS PURAS (1908) and BALADAS DE PRIMAVERA (1910) Jiménez continued to experiment with different meters. He moved to Madrid in 1912, translated with Zenobia Camprubí Aymar, a Puerto Rican educated in America and Spain, the work of the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore, Jiménez's the popular Platero and I., a pastoral prose poem, dates from this period. Platero follows the narrator on his trips to town and to countryside, its silent company is a contrast to his ecstatic linguistic observations. After Platero's death he visits its grave and asks, "do you still remember me?"

In 1916 Jiménez sailed in pursuit of Zanobia Camprubi to New York, and married her. This was the first crucial sea voyage in his life – the second happened in 1948. The sea, which led his thoughts to nothingness, led to publication of DIARIO DE UNA POETA RECIÉNCASADO (1918). Many verses from this period sound almost like prose. ETERNIDADES meant a new direction in Jiménez's literary production. He decided to return to the simplicity of his earlier poetry. In BELLEZA (1923) he contemplated the writer's relationship to beauty.

Jiménez worked from the 1910s for the next twenty years as a critic and editor at various literary journals in Spain. His influence was seen on the early works of Vicente Aleixandre, and on others; in the 1920s Jiménez also met in Madrid the young Federico García Lorca, who studied law at the university. From 1923 to 1936 Jiménez did not publish any books of new poetry. When Buñuel, Dalí, and Lorca visited him in Madrid, he said that he saw in them the trio of the future. Afterwards they thanked Jiménez by calling him a son of a bitch in a letter and dragging his whole work through the mud, including Platero y yo.

After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, the Republican government appointed Jiménez honorary cultural attaché to the United States. From 1939, when Franco's forces won control of Spain, he remained abroad. In 1951 Jiménez settled with his wife in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he lectured and gave classes at the university. However, he never considered himself a writer in exile, but a servant of poetry. In 1956, the same year he won the Nobel Prize, his wife died. Jiménez never recovered and died in San Juan on May 29, 1958.

Jiménez's poetic output was immense. His better-known works include SONETOS ESPIRITUALES 1914-1915 (1916), PIEDRA Y CIELO (1919), POESÍA, EN VERSO, 1917-1923 (1923), POESÍA EN PROSA Y VERSO (1932), VOCES DE MI COPLA (1945), ANIMAL DE FONDO (1947). LA ESTASIÓN TOTAL (1946), which appeared in Buenos Aires, was ignored in Spain. Jiménez's last book was DIOS DESENDO Y DISEANTE (1949, God Desired and Desiring), a testament and identification with all that is beautiful and creative in nature. As a Platonist, Jiménez believed in a universal consciousness that existed apart from individual consciousness. Colors and music were central to his work. In one poem Jiménez compared music to a "naked woman, running wildly in a clear night."

Las mil torres el mundo, contra un ocaso de oro,
levantan su hermosura frente a mi pensamiento.
Un éstatis de piedra de mil arquitecturas,
en undeslumbramiento, me lleva, mudo y ciego.
(...)
(from 'Retorno')
For further reading: Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999, vol. 2); Self and Image in Juan Ramón Jiménez by J.C. Wilcox (1986); Word and Work in the Poetry of Juan Ramón Jiménez by M. Coke-Enguidanos (1982); Vida y obra de Juan Ramón Jiménez by G. Palau de Nemes (1974, 2 vols.); Juan Ramón Jiménez by H.T. Young (1967); Circle of Time by P. Olson (1967); La obra en prosa de Juan Ramón Jiménez by M.P. Predmore (1966); Estudios sobre Juan Ramón Jiménez by R. Gullón (1969); La segunda época de Juan Ramón Jiménez by A. Sánchez-Barbudo (1962); The Selected Writings of Juan Ramón Jiménez by H.R. Hays (1957)

Selected works:

  • ALMAS DE VIOLETA, 1900
  • NINFEAS, 1900
  • RIMAS, 1902
  • ARIAS TRISTES, 1903
  • JARDINES LEJOS, 1904
  • PASTORALES, 1905
  • ELEJÍAS PURAS, 1908
  • ELEGÍAS INTERMEDIAS, 1909
  • OLVIDANZAS, 1909 (ed. by Francisco Garfías, 1968)
  • BALADAS DE PRIMAVERA, 1910
  • LA SOLEDAD SONORA, 1911
  • PASTORALES, 1911
  • POEMAS MÁGICOS Y DOLIENTES, 1911
  • MELANCOLÍA, 1912
  • LABERINTO, 1913
  • PLATERO Y YO, 1914 - Platero and I (translations by Eloïse Roach, 1957; William and Mary Roberts, 1956; Antonio T. de Nicolás, 1978; Stanley Appelbaum, 2004) - Harmo ja minä (suom. Tyyni Tuulio, 1957)
  • ESTÍO, 1915
  • SONETOS ESPRITUALES 1914-1915, 1916 - Spiritual Sonnets (tr. by Carl W. Cobb, 1996)
  • DIARIO DE UN POETA RECIÉNCASADO, 1917 (rev. ed., Diario de poeta y mar, 1948, 1955) - Diary of a Newlywed Poet (translation by Hugh A. Harter, 2004)
  • POESÍAS ESCOGIDAS (1899-1917), 1917
  • ETERNIDADES, 1918
  • PIEDRA Y CIELO, 1919
  • translator (with Z. Camprubí de Jiménez): Jinetes hacia el mar, by J.M. Synge, 1920
  • SEGUNDA ANTOLOGÍA POÉTICA (1899-1918), 1922
  • POESÍA, EN VERSO, 1917-1923, 1923
  • BELLEZA, 1923
  • UNIDAD, 1925
  • OBRA EN MARCHA, 1929
  • SUCESIÓN, 1932
  • POESÍA EN PROSA Y VERSO, 1932
  • PRESENTE, 1934
  • I (HOJAS NUEVAS, PROSA Y VERSO), 1935
  • CANCIÓN, 1936
  • LA ESTACIÓN TOTAL CON CANCIONES DE NUEVA LUZ, 1936
  • CONFECIAS I: POLÍTICA POÉTICA, 1936
  • VERSO Y PROSA PARA NIÑOS, 1937
  • CIEGO ANTE CIEGOS, 1938
  • ESPAÑOLES DE TRES MUNDOS, 1942
  • ANTOLOGÍA POÉTICA, 1944
  • VOCES DE MI COPLA, 1945
  • LA ESTACIÓN TOTAL CON LAS CONCIONES DE LA NUEVA LUX, 1946
  • EL ZARATÁN, 1946
  • ANIMAL DE FUNDO, 1947
  • DIARIO DE POETA Y MAR, 1948 (new version of Diario de un poeta reciéncasado)
  • ROMANCES DE CORAL GABLES, 1948
  • ANIMAL DE FONDO, 1949
  • DIOS DESENDO Y DESEANTE, 1949 - God Desired and Desiring (translated by Antonio de Nicolás, 1987)
  • Fifty Spanish Poems, 1950 (translated by J.B. Trend)
  • TERCERA ANTOLOJÍA POÉTICA, 1957
  • EL ZARATÁN, 1957
  • Selected Writings, 1957 (translated by H. R. Hays)
  • LA CORRIENTE INFINITA 1903-1954, 1961
  • POR EL CRITISAL AMARILLO 1902-1954, 1961
  • EL TRABAJO GUSTOSO 1948-1954, 1961
  • LIBROS DE POESÍA, 1957 (ed. by Agustin Caballero)
  • TERCERA ANTOLOGÍA POÉTICA 1898-1953, 1957
  • PRIMEROS LIBROS DE POESÍA, 1960 (ed. by Francisco Garfías)
  • OLVIDOS DE GRANADA, 1960
  • CUADERNOS, 1960 (ed. by Francisco Garfías)
  • Three Hudred Poems 1903-1953, 1962 (tr. by Eloïse Roach)
  • EL MODERNISMO: 1962
  • CARTAS 1898-1958, 1962
  • PRIMERAS PROSAS 1890-1954, 1962 (ed. by Francisco Garfías)
  • LA COLINA DE LOS CHOPOS 1913-1928, 1965
  • ESTÉTICA Y ÉTICA ESTÉTICA, 1967
  • Forty Poems, 1967
  • LIBROS DE PROSA, 1969-
  • Lorca and Jiménez: Selected Poems, 1973 (chosen and translated by Robert Bly)
  • Jiménez and Machado, 1974 (translated by J.B. Trend and J.L. Gili)
  • LA OBRA DESNUDA, 1976 (ed. by Arturo del Villar) - The Naked Book! (trans. Dennis Maloney, 1984)
  • LEYENDA, 1978 (ed. by A. Sánchez Romeralo)
  • HISTORIAS Y CUENTOS, 1979 - Stories of Life and Death (translated by Antonio de Nicolás, 1986)
  • ISLA DE LA SIMPATÍA, 1981
  • TIEMPO Y ESPACIO, 1982 - Time and Space: A Poetic Autobiography (translated by Antonio de Nicolás, 1988)
  • LA REALIDAD INVISIBLE (1917-1920, 1924), 1983 - Invisible Reality (translated by Antonio de Nicolás, 1 1987)
  • GUERRA EN ESPAÑA, 1936-1953, 1985
  • Light and Shadows, 1987 (translated by Robert Bly et al.)
  • The Complete Perfectionist, 1997 (edited and translated by Christopher Maurer)


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