Gustavo Gutierrez published a magazine (quarterly) in 1930 called "La Revista de La Habana." It contained articles by many of the most renowned thinkers of the day including such international luminaries as Albert Einstein, Langston Hughes and Federico Garcia Lorca. One could also say that the Cuban contributers were among Cuba's "best and brightest!" It's subject matter included politics, economics, science, mathematics, literature, poetry, history, painting, sculpture, current events, etc.
The top photograph shows the first magazine cover and the bottom photograph shows many of the contributors including; Roig de Leuchsenring, Fernando Ortiz, Hernandez Cata, Manach, Sicre, Chacon y Calvo, Gattorno, Abela, Ichaso, Marinello, Riveron, Massaguer (see blog entries C.W.Massaguer #1 and #2), Wanguemert, Lugo-Vina and others. Plus, one of the contributors from Spain can be identified on the extreme right of the photograph as the celebrated dramaturge and poet, Federico Garcia Lorca.
In the introduction, the young Gustavo saw Cuba as a natural bridge between the two Americas due to Cuba’s strategic geographical position; aided by the new and modern forms of rapid air travel and tele-communications. He reminded his readers of the neighbor to the north’s centrifugal reach and meddling drive, fearing, as a result, the disintegration of Cuba’s own cultural identity. This was a common concern of the day.
In the introduction, the young Gustavo saw Cuba as a natural bridge between the two Americas due to Cuba’s strategic geographical position; aided by the new and modern forms of rapid air travel and tele-communications. He reminded his readers of the neighbor to the north’s centrifugal reach and meddling drive, fearing, as a result, the disintegration of Cuba’s own cultural identity. This was a common concern of the day.
He lamented, “We Cubans, have a strange
habit of looking fondly and romantically towards our colonial and revolutionary
past, relentlessly quoting our heroes. We cultivate a frenetic desire for
material riches, acting like a slave who’s been put out to dance in front of
his master. We’ve become an ostentatious populace that gyrates in cabarets with
foreign names, tacky imitations, where tourists of all types satiate their
thirst for liquor and lust. Why all this? What greatness does this achieve?
What reason for this licentiousness while the people traverse through one of
their deepest crises?”
Gustavo was
concerned for Cuba and its people. Culture needed to propagate among the
people so they could develop discernment and build good character. He warned
his countrymen not to be “duped by professional agitators, oracles acting in
their own interest or money lenders from foreign lands.” Nor did he accept the
perspective of the idle rich, “who lounge around with their material possessions
seeing Cuba through rose-colored glasses.”
He saw
humanity broken as a result of the Great War which divided men into
irreconcilable camps, individuals prone to extremes, exaggerations of all sorts,
a people capable of deceiving themselves and lying to all those around them.
In sensing
this lack of honesty and integrity he wrote, “In our country we’ve almost
completely lost the notion of limits. Everyone’s a genius to his friend and
mediocre to his adversaries. To call a politician, artist or poet, notable, is
almost a personal offence. One is forced to state that with “so and so” is born
a new era in literature, politics or art. Critics are almost always subjective.
The work doesn’t really matter resulting in a majority not concerned with real
success or achievement, but rather, with favorable publicity and public opinion
forged in deceit. There’s a lack of sincerity with one’s vocation or opinions
or achievements since the ultimate goal is instant material gratification
regardless of the cost. Everything is fabricated and contradictory because the
poet writes the laws and the lawyer writes the novels while the doctor is put in
charge of foreign policy.” In other words, it was all about the glitz and the
glamour with little concern for true artistry in any form.
“The
political, social and economic life of the world, he continued, “is changing
dramatically. New systems of government are sweeping into our lives; the Soviet
model, fascism and democracy. As life renews itself and advances it gives birth
to new problems and defective forms, which in turn renew themselves, and the
cycle continues. All reforms surge
forward to eliminate certain defects but new ones materialize, unpredictable,
unstoppable."
The previous
generation of Cubans that in 1902 fought and won their independence from their
colonial oppressors achieved their goal, freedom from the Spanish Crown.
Gustavo’s concern was with his troubled generation and the ones to follow. He
considered himself a man of tomorrow, on a path laden with difficulty, warning
the reader not to succumb to the past to fix the problems of the present. He
said that, “We must focus our
literature, our arts and our sciences with a modern criteria and re-orient and
perfect our socio-political character internationally and domestically. It will
not be achieved with poems and speeches but through the slow yet indestructible
process of education with its ultimate goal being that of culture. We must not
poison the soul of a cultured populous with lies nor can we oppress them for
very long. Culture nurtured and led our forefathers toward victory and it must
do likewise for us today.”
“We intend on
bringing the advances of other cultures to the people of Cuba and those of the
Cuban people to the world. This is the purpose of this magazine. We have gathered Cubans from all
stripes, young and enthusiastic intellectuals. And though we do not all think alike, unsurprisingly, we are
progressive, rational and avant-garde. But more than this we are all woven
together by an ideology that is pure Cuban with a firm conviction against
ignorance, indolence, selfishness and greed. We are guided by one sole purpose:
Onward with culture, onward for truth!”
The public
response to the publication of La Revista de La Habana exceeded expectations.
Congratulatory letters and telexes arrived from Latin America, the United
States and Europe. Naturally, the response was greatest among the intellectual
class in Cuba. However, due to a domestic economic downturn as well as the
advent of the Great Depression, La Revista de La Habana closed after one year,
having published only twelve issues.
2 comments:
This is a great article! I am looking this magazine for an investigation I'm doing about a mexican writer named Nellie Campobello, I read in a tesis she published at this important magazine, however I'm not sure where can I get her texts o it, this is from November 1930. Do you know where can I get it?
Congratulations for your job! I'm pretty sure your grandfather was a great man and it's ver important you continue in a certain way his labor, I bet he would be so proud. Regards, Brenda
Brenda, ¿pudiste encontrar la publicación de Nellie Campobello? Si todavía te sirve yo podría proporcionártela. Por mi parte llegué a este artículo buscando el nombre completo del ilustrador Jorge, quien hizo el dibujo del rostro de Nellie que acompaña al artículo de noviembre de 1930.
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