Horacio Mendizábal Explained

Horacio Mendizábal (1847–1871) was an Argentine poet, translator and activist.[1]

Life

Horacio Mendizábal was born to an Afro-Argentine upper-class family in Buenos Aires, the son of Rosendo Mendizábal, a member of the Chamber of Deputies of Buenos Aires and one of the earliest black politicians in Argentina. Publishing his first volume of poetry as a teenager, he became increasingly concerned with issues of racial equality and national independence. He died, aged 24, while tending to the sick in the 1871 yellow fever epidemic.[1]

His son was the pianist and composer Rosendo Mendizábal.

In 2019, the Argentinian publisher Amauta&Yaguar republished the work Hours of Meditation as a tribute to 150 years of his publication. It includes a preliminary note by Federico Pita, president of Diafar (African Diaspora in Argentina), Espacio Malcolm and editor of the newspaper El Afroargentino.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Book: Elizondo, Joy. Kwame Anthony. Appiah. Kwame Anthony Appiah. Henry Louis Jr.. Gates. Henry Louis Gates Jr. Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience. 3. 2005. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-517055-9. 793–4. Mendizábal, Horacio.