Nydia Lamarque | |
Birth Date: | 1906 |
Birth Place: | Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Occupation: | Poet |
Nydia Lamarque (1906–1982) was an Argentine poet. In addition to publishing several books of poetry, she was a lawyer, activist, and translator.[1] She was associated with the socialism and feminism movements.
Lamarque was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and was of partial French descent on her father's side.[2] At age 12, she began writing poetry.
In 1925, Lamarque published , her first book of poetry.[3] [4] In 1927, she published .[5] In 1930, her third work, , was published.[6] In 1950, she published ,[7] and in 1951, she published .[8] [9]
She was fluent in French and was known as a "prominent translator of French literature," translating the work of "Baudelaire, Jean Racine, Rimbaud,[10] Henri De Man, Adolfo Boschot, and Héctor Berlioz." In 1948, she published the first translation of Baudelaire in Argentina.[11]
Lamarque worked as a defense attorney and was hired by the Red International Association.[12]
Lamarque was involved in Boedo, a "vanguard writers' group," and was a member of Buenos Aires. She was also associated with the Argentinean Communist Party and "concerned [herself] with social problems."[13] She served as president of the Argentine Antiwar Committee and organized the Latin American Antiwar Conference in March 1933.
In July 1933, Lamarque published an article in the magazine Contra, in which she argued that "art, as a product and synthesis of social factors, reflects the reality of society" and that "pure art is the decadence of the bourgeoisie" and defended the "triumphant proletarian art of the U.S.S.R."
In 1925, Jorge Luis Borges wrote positively about Lamarque's work in Spanish, comparing it to Alfonsina Storni's and saying that it had neither "the vagueness nor the gossipy shrillness that this Storni tends to offer us."[14] He dedicated his poetry collection, Fervor of Buenos Aires, to Lamarque.[15] [16]
In Literatura Argentina Contemporanea, literary critic Juan Pinto referred to Lamarque as "the poetess with the most masculine voice of our literature."