Manuel Ugarte

Manuel Ugarte Baldomero ( born February 27, 1875 in Buenos Aires, † December 2, 1951 in Nice ) was an Argentine writer.

The brother of the composer Floro Ugarte visited in 1881, the Colegio Nacional Buenos Aires. In 1893 he published his first volume of poetry Palabras. In 1895 he founded the Revista Literaria, which he headed until 1897 to his departure for Paris. There he authored several books, including, inter alia, Miguel de Unamuno, Pío Baroja and Ruben Dario wrote forewords, learned English and Italian, visited philosophy and sociology courses at the university and was under the influence of Jean Jaurès ' to the Socialists.

A trip through the USA and Mexico in 1899 confirmed his socialist convictions, and after his return to Buenos Aires in 1903, he joined the Socialist Party of Argentina, in which he opposed to Juan B. Justo and Nicolás Repetto represented a national course. Leopoldo Lugones addition, Alfredo L. Palacios, José Ingenieros, Roberto J. Payró and others, he was one of the young intellectuals of the Generación 900

At the International Socialist Congress 1904 in Amsterdam Ugarte represented the Socialist Party of Argentina. In 1908 he presented in the article Socialismo y Patria, which he published in the socialist newspaper La Vanguardia, his ideas of a combination of anti-imperialism, socialism and democratic nationalism dar. Between 1911 and 1913, he called at conferences and lectures in Latin America and the University of Columbia, the establishment of a Latin American Union modeled after the United States.

In 1913, he left the Socialist Party and founded in 1914 the Asociación Latinoamericana. The magazine was founded in 1915 La Patria to the Ricardo Jaimes Freyre Rubén Darío and made ​​contributions, existed just three months. 1918 was the Federación Universitaria Ugarte spokesman Argentina.

From 1919 to 1935 Ugarte lived in exile in Europe, first in Spain - later he settled in Nice. He was next to Maxim Gorky, Miguel de Unamuno and Albert Einstein to the editors of the magazine Monde. From 1939 to 1946 Ugarte lived with his wife in the Chilean Viña el Mar.

In 1946 he returned to Argentina and joined the Peronist regime, as its ambassador, he worked in Mexico, Nicaragua and Cuba. In 1951 he retired to Nice, where he died on December 2.

Works

  • Palabras, Buenos Aires 1893
  • Poemas grotescos, Buenos Aires 1893
  • Versos y serenatas, Buenos Aires 1894
  • Paisajes parisienses, Paris 1901
  • Crónicas de boulevard, Paris 1902
  • La novela de las horas y los días, París 1903
  • Visiones de Espana ( Apuntes de un argentino viajero ), Valencia, 1904
  • El arte de la democracia ( prose de lucha ), Valencia 1904
  • Una tarde de otono ( Pequena Sinfonía otonal ), Paris 1906
  • La joven literatura hispano americana. Antología de prosistas y poetas, París 1906
  • Enfermedades sociales, Barcelona 1906
  • Burbujas de la vida, Paris 1908
  • Las nuevas tendencias literarias, Valencia 1908
  • Cuentos Argentinos, Paris 1910
  • Los estudiantes de París, Madrid 1910
  • El porvenir de la América espanola, Valencia 1910
  • Cuentos de La Pampa, Madrid 1920
  • Las espontáneas, Barcelona 1921
  • POESIAS completas, Barcelona 1921
  • Wed campana hispano americana, Barcelona 1922
  • La patria grande, Madrid 1922
  • El destino de un contienente, Madrid 1923
  • El crimen de las máscaras, Valencia 1924
  • El camino de los dioses, Barcelona 1926
  • La vida inverosímil, Barcelona 1927
  • El dolor de escribir, Madrid 1932
  • Escritores Iberoamericanos del 1900, Santiago de Chile 1951
  • El naufragio de los Argonautas, Santiago de Chile 1951
  • Cabral. Un poeta de América, Buenos Aires 1955
  • La reconstrucción de Hispano América, Buenos Aires 1961

Swell

  • Proyecto Ensayo Hispanico - Manuel Ugarte
  • Author
  • Poetry
  • Novel, epic
  • Argentine
  • Born 1875
  • Died in 1951
  • Man
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