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Roberto
Arlt -
Answers
After failing out of primary school and educating himself mainly
on the streets of Beunos Aires, Roberto Arlt (1900-1942) would
grow to distinguish himself as an important Argentine short
story writer, novelist, playwright, and journalist. Equally
criticized for his rough use of language and praised for his
innovative approach to Spanish, Arlt left his mark on Argentina.
Despite dreams of becoming a successful inventor, and his
entrance into journalism only to support his creative writing
career financially, his Aquafuertes portenas newspaper column (later
in book form) would become one of the classics of Argentine
literature. In the words of the International Dictionary of
Theatre, "Arlt incorporates ideas and techniques to create his
own unique literary world of bizarre dream sequences and night
marish characters, fueled by a strong social conscience."
Early Life
Arlt was born Roberto Godofredo Christophersen Arlt on April 2,
1900, to a German immigrant, glass-blower and postcard artist,
Karl, and an Italian homemaker, Catalina (maiden name,
Iobstraibitzer) in the Flores Barrio (the District of Flowers)
in Beunos Aires, Argentina. (There is dispute over Arlt's exact
birthday between April 2, 7, and 26). German was the language
used in the home, and Arlt's parents, who immigrated in their
thirties, never gained full usage of Spanish. Arlt had two
sisters and both died from tuberculosis. One died at a very
young age, and the other, Lila, died in 1936.
The Arlt family was poor, and Karl Arlt traveled to the
provinces for months at a time to work, but never succeeded in
improving his family's economic situation. Karl Arlt was a
tyrant who abused his children. Arlt attended several schools as
a child, but was expelled somewhere between the ages of eight
and ten and was discarded as useless. He learned mainly on the
streets and in the library, where he passed most of his time. In
the library, he read Russian authors Maxim Gorky, Leo Tolstoy,
and Fyodor Dostoevsky. He published his first short story
between the ages of 14 and 16 in Revista Popular and left home
in 1916.
He attended the Naval School of Mechanics from 1919 to 1920 and
served in the Argentine armed forces in Córdoba during the same
period. To make ends meet, Arlt was employed as a book store
clerk, an apprentice to a tinsmith, a painter, a mechanic, a
vulcanizer, a brick factory manager, a newspaper manager, and a
port worker. He never did too well at any of these jobs. He
spent much of his free time in the taverns, especially the café
La Punalada, and shady spots of Buenos Aires, making
acquaintances with the seedy patrons who would later populate
his writing.
Journalist
Between 1914 and 1916, the same time he was starting his fiction
writing career, Arlt began writing for newspapers: Ultima Hora,
Critica (Critical) (in 1927), and Don Goyo (beginning in 1926).
He interned with writer and journalist Ricardo Guiraldes from
1925 to 1927 and published with Guiraldes's magazine, Prow. Much
later he wrote for El mundo (The World).
Arlt began his journalistic work as a way to make money and to
introduce himself into Argentine literary circles. It turned out
to be more than that. His daily columns for El mundo, "Aquafuertes
portenas" ("Porteno Etchings"), appeared from 1928 to 1942 (compiled
first in book form in 1936) and earned him nation-wide fame. In
the column, he shared his opinions about society, economics, and
politics. His journalism proved to be his most popular offering
to society. On the day his column appeared each week, El mundo
sold twice as many copies. In 1935, he was sent to Spain by El
mundo as a correspondent, where he wrote his Spanish Etchings.
It was one of the few times in his life that Arlt left Beunos
Aires. Arlt wrote for El mundo until he died. His articles in
Don Goyo have also been published in collections.
Novelist
Arlt presented his first short story, Jehovah in 1916. He wrote
part of his first novel as a column, "Las ciencias ocultas en la
ciudad de Buenos Aires" ("The Occult Sciences in the City of
Buenos Aires"), when he was 19. He published his first novel, El
jugete rabioso (The Rabid Toy), in 1926. El Poder de la Palabra
online cited El jugete rabioso as "one of the best Argentine
novels… . [With a] flood of autobiographical and picaresque
characters, [it] expresses anguish and violence with the rough,
most alive linguistic support." El jugete rabioso found little
acceptance in critical circles, but was given much attention by
the youth of Buenos Aires.
In 1929, Arlt published Los siete locos (The Seven Madmen),
which was to be his only English language success and his most
notable novel. None of his other works have been translated into
English. Los siete locos won a municipal award, but the critics
read it as a realistic book and criticized it for bad grammar
and craftsmanship. The book was meant to be experimental and
expressionistic. Los lanzallamas (The Flame Throwers) was the
sequel novel to Los siete locos. Both Los siete locos and Los
lanzallamas were influenced by Dostoevsky. Both reveal the
underside of Buenos Aires life, with its delinquents,
prostitutes, and ruffians. They have been credited with
portraying the epitome of the alienated man in modern society.
Arlt's first three novels are sometimes considered a trilogy. In
1931, Arlt published El amor brujo (Love of the Sorcerer), his
last novel.
Arlt's writing style was innovative. He was the first novelist
to use language from lower-and middle-class Spanish, including
the language of thieves (lunfardo), the language of Beunos Aires
(portenos), vulgarities, foreign language, Castilian Spanish,
scientific language, and lyricism. He also regularly wrote using
the informal form of "you:" "voseo." He broke the literary rules
of tradition at every turn and populated his work with the
unpleasant and grossly urban. Arlt was quoted in Contemporary
Authors speaking to the stuffy, literary traditions of his time,
"Today, amid the babble of an inevitably crumbling social
edifice, it is impossible to linger over embroidery." He also
cited the new and changing ideas of people as being a reason to
reject the censures of "linguistic purity." Arlt assumed that
language was ever changing, even living.
He published two short story collections, El jorabadito (The
Little Hunchback) in 1933 and El criador de gorilas (The Gorilla
Breeder) in 1941. El jorabadito was Arlt's favorite of all his
books. El criador de gorilas contained 15 of his short stories.
The short stories reinforced Arlt's style, continuing the use of
confused chronology, fragmentation, chaos, and "warped
personalities" in a downward-spiraling society. After Arlt wrote
his fourth novel, he discovered theater, a medium he then
dedicated his career to.
Playwright
Prueba de amor (Test of Love) and El fabricante de fantasmas
(The Ghost Manfacturer) were Arlt's first dramatic endeavors.
His story Trescientor millones (The Three Hundred Million) was
populated with more of Arlt's grotesque characters. It
incorporated a theme that would run though his plays, the
tension between reality and illusion (also present in Saverio el
cruel and El fabricante de fantasmas ). Trescientor millones,
Saviero el cruel, and El fabricante de fantasmas were the most
significant of his plays. In all three, Arlt is said in
International Dictionary of Theatre to: "[present] the fantasy
world as bewitching in contrast to dull, prosaic reality.
Nevertheless, to enter the realm of the imagination is to lose
control and ultimately to encounter madness and death." Some of
Arlt's other plays and play collections include Escenas de un
grotesco, La isla desierta (The Desert Island), Africa, La
fiesta del hierro, El desierto entra en la ciudad, La juerga de
los polichinelas, and Un hombre sensible. His plays contain an
indebtedness to Dostoevsky and continue portrayal of the
grotesque and madness and also continue Arlt's social criticism.
Further Success
Arlt's work influenced later Spanish writers Gabriel Garcia
Marquez and Jorge Luis Borges. His work has met with favor and
respect since the 1960s. Contemporary Authors stated, "His books
have been enthusiastically accepted by Argentine writers who see
in Arlt a proponent of anti-literary and anti-establishment
writing." Arlt's short stories, novels, journalism, and plays
have been joined and printed in collections by influential
publishing houses. In 1984, The Seven Madmen was translated to
English.
Other Facets
Arlt's dream was to become distinguished as an inventor, but he
continuously met with failure. He formed the ARNA society, an
inventing business with Pascual Naccaratti and installed a small
chemistry laboratory in Lanús, Argentina. Arlt secured a patent
for reinforced rubber, but it failed commercially.
Arlt married Carmen Antinucci in 1923 and they had a daughter,
Mirta, that same year. Antinucci secretly suffered from
tuberculosis when she married Arlt, and he never quite forgave
her for not telling him. The couple stayed in Córdoba because of
her health and she died in 1929. Arlt married Elizabeth Shine in
1939. She gave birth to a child soon after his death. Arlt died
of a heart attack on July 26, 1942, in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Books
Contemporary Authors, The Gale Group, 2000.
Dictionary of Hispanic Biography, The Gale Group, 1996.
International Dictionary of Theatre, Volume 2: Playwrights, St.
James Press, 1993.
Online
"Author," http://cervantesvirtual.com/bib_author/Arlt/ (February
10, 2003).
" El Poder de la Palabra, " http://www.epdlp.com/arlt.html (February
10, 2003).
"Roberto Arlt," http://www.jbeilharz.de/autores/arlt.html (February
10, 2003).
"Roberto Godofredo Christophersen Arlt," http://www.literatura.org/index.html
(February 10, 2003).
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