Definition of Headless Generation
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in May. 2018
In the field of literature, the modernism it's a movement poetic whose highest representative was the Nicaraguan Rubén Darío. His style and language influenced other poetic currents. One of them was the Beheaded Generation, made up of a small group of young Ecuadorian poets who developed their work around 1920.
The most representative authors are Medardo Ángel Silva, Ernesto Noboa y Caamaño, Arturo Borja and Humberto Fierro.
The premature death of all of them made them popularly known as the Headless Generation.
Common features in his poetic production
The four poets that make up this generation were inspired by two sources: Rubén's new language Darius and the Symbolism and Parnassianism of the French Poets Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine. On the other hand, all of them were friends and maintained an intense correspondence relationship.
The modernism of the Ecuadorian poets stands out for the following aspects:
1) a longing for Liberty in literary creation,
2) a deep admiration by nature,
3) the exaltation of beauty and
4) the use of an exotic language, full of rhythm and musicality.
Tragic lives
Medardo Ángel Silva was born into a family humble of the city of Guayaquil in 1898. He did not finish his studies and started working in a printing company. At the age of 17 he had already published some poems in literary magazines and in the newspaper El Telégrafo. In 1919 he decided to end his life by shooting himself in the temple in front of his girlfriend when he had just turned 21 years old.
Ernesto Noboa y Caamaño was born in Guayaquil in 1898. His family was well-off financially and for this reason reason he was able to dedicate himself to the bohemian life in the style of the Parisian poets of the time. As a result of a neurosis, he ended up taking morphine and hallucinogenic drugs to find some peace of mind in his spirit. In 1927, sad and sick, he died at the age of 38
Arturo Borja (1892-1912) came from a very wealthy Quito family. At 15 he traveled to Paris to treat a serious vision problem and there he was imbued with the spirit of the "Damned Poets" such as Baudelaire or Verlaine. At 20 he died of a morphine overdose, a few weeks after contracting marriage.
Humberto Fierro was born in the city of Quito. He was a poet of great sensitivity, lonely and very introverted. His working life was spent in an office of the Public Ministry. At the age of 43, he died a natural death and was the last poet of the beheaded Generation.
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