Leopoldo Marechal
Leopoldo Marechal (born June 11, 1900, Buenos Aires—died September, 1970, Buenos Aires) was an Argentine writer and critic who was best known for his philosophical novels.
In the early 1920s, Marechal was part of the literary group responsible for Martín Fierro and Proa, Ultraista journals that revolutionized Argentine letters. His first book of poems, Aguiluchos (1922; “Eaglets”), employed Modernista techniques in the treatment of pastoral themes. In Días como flechas (1926; “Days Like Arrows”) and Odas para el hombre y la mujer (1929; “Odes for Man and Woman”), his metaphors and images become more daring in expressing the Ultraista aesthetic. With Cinco poemas australes (1937; “Five Southern Poems”), Sonetos a Sophia (1940; “Sonnets to Sophia”), and El centauro (1940; “The Centaur”), his poetry was influenced by Neoplatonic philosophy and shows a search for balance and order in a chaotic world. This theme continued in the “Canciones Elbitences,” love poems addressed to a quintessential woman, Elbiamor. These poems were included in Antología poética (1969).
Marechal’s masterpiece is the novel Adán Buenosayres (1948), a work of technical complexity, stylistic innovations, and highly poetic language that was a precursor of the Latin American new novel. The mythical voyage of Adán, the hero, his descent into Hell, and his constant search for the ideal is at once autobiographical, a roman à clef, and a historicalization of Argentina from geologic times.
A socialist in his youth, Marechal became an ardent Peronist, and during the government of Juan Perón he occupied important government cultural posts. With Perón’s fall he went into virtual seclusion but returned to public attention with the novels El banquete de Severo Arcángelo (1965; “The Banquet of Severo Arcángelo”) and Megafón o la guerra (1970; “Megafón, or The War”). In these Marechal continued his explorations of mythology and idealism.