José Juan Arrom Explained

José Juan Arrom
Birth Date:28 February 1910
Birth Place:Holguín, Cuba
Death Place:Acton, Massachusetts
Occupation:Professor, Scholar of Latin American culture
Alma Mater:Yale University
Workplaces:Yale University

José Juan Arrom (February 28, 1910 - April 12, 2007) was a leading authority on Latin American cultural studies and a pioneer in shaping the field in the United States at a time when most Spanish departments mainly taught about peninsular Spain.[1] He is particularly well-known for his studies of Latin American theater, Cuban culture and lexicology, and the myths of the pre-Columbian inhabitants of the Caribbean. He was a professor of Latin American Literature at Yale University for nearly 40 years.[2]

Background

Arrom was born in Holguín, Cuba in 1910 to a Cuban mother and Mayorquín father. He grew up in the small town of Mayarí, where his father had a dry goods store. After emigrating to the United States in 1932, he attended the Mount Herman School in Northfield, Massachusetts. In 1934 he entered Yale University and earned three degrees: a B.A. (1937), M.A. (1940), and Ph.D. (1941). He was one of the first Latin American scholars to obtain a doctorate from a North American university. In 1947, he married Silvia Ravelo from Santiago de Cuba. The couple lived in New Haven, Connecticut and had two children, José Orlando Arrom and Silvia Marina Arrom.[3]

Career

Arrom spent his entire career teaching at Yale University. In addition to offering courses on Latin American literature, he served as director of graduate studies in Spanish from 1952 to 1968. He also helped build the Latin American Collection of the Yale University Library, where he served as curator from 1942 to 1962. He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1976. Rolena Adorno praised him as "one of the true founders" of Yale's Department of Spanish and Portuguese and explained that "his contributions to the history of Latin American literature form part of the permanent record of the development of our discipline."[4]

Works

Arrom has written more than a dozen books and numerous scholarly articles exploring a wide range of subjects and time periods. His survey of nearly five hundred years of Latin American literature, the Esquema generacional de las letras hispanoamericanas (1963) and Hispanoamérica: panorama contemporáneo de su cultura (1969) have been his most famous works. He discovered and edited two texts related to the Spanish conquest of the Americas: Fernan Perez de Oliva's Historia de la invención de las Indias (1965), and Ramón Pané’s Account of the Antiquities of the Indians – the only one of his books to be translated into English (1999). His studies of the Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre (Our Lady of Charity) and of the origin and meaning of the term criollo are now classics, and have been reproduced many times. He also authored the section on Spanish American drama for the Handbook of Latin American Studies from 1948 to 1955. His last publication, De donde crecen las palmas (2005), is a collection that pairs some of his scholarly essays with his memoir, Recuerdos de un niño de Mayarí que viajó a la región de las nieves.[5] Jorge Ulloa Hung and Julio Corbea Calzado authored a book entitled, José Juan Arrom y la búsqueda de nuestras raíces (2011) to pay tribute to Arrom's contributions as a critic, essayist, and researcher.[6]

In 1979, when he received an award from the Hispanic Caucus of the U.S. Congress, Georgette M. Dorn of the Library of Congress interviewed him for the Library's Archive of Hispanic Literature on Tape.[7]

In March 1997, Arrom organized an exhibition at El Museo del Barrio along with Ricardo E. Alegría and Dicey Taylor. Taíno: Pre-Columbian Art and Culture from the Caribbean was the first comprehensive presentation of Taíno works in North America. Holland Cotter considered it "both a landmark of scholarly achievement and a riveting visual experience."[8]

Awards and honors

Arrom's many honorary memberships included the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Ateneo Americano (Washington, D.C.), the Instituto de Historia del Teatro Americano (Buenos Aires), the North American Academy of the Spanish Language, the Real Academia Española de la Lengua (Spain), the Unión de Escritores y Artistas de Cuba, and the Asociación de Lingüistas de Cuba. His awards include:

Publications

Books (only first editions listed)

Critical editions (introduction and notes by Arrom)

Selected articles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Quien no se aventura no cruza la mar: Conversación con José Juan Arrom.
  2. Web site: José Juan Arrom.
  3. Web site: IN MEMORIAM: José Juan Arrom, 1910-2007.
  4. Web site: In Memoriam: José Juan Arrom.
  5. Web site: Recuerdos de un niño de Mayarí que viajó a la región de las nieves," memorias de mi padre en José Juan Arrom.
  6. Web site: José Juan Arrom y la búsqueda de nuestras raíces.
  7. Web site: Cuban literary scholar José Juan Arrom reads from his prose and is interviewed by Georgette. Dorn.
  8. Web site: ART VIEW; Out of the Caribbean Past, The Art of a Lost People.