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Miguel de Unamuno

Miguel de Unamuno (18641936) was a Spanish writer. He worked in all major genres: essays, novels, poetry, and theater, and, as a modernist, did much to dissolve the boundaries between genres and create new ones. In addition to writing, Unamuno played an important role in intellectual life, serving as rector of the University of Salamanca from 1900 – 1914 and 1930 – 1936, during a period of great change and upheaval. Unamuno was removed from his post by the government in 1914, to the protest of Spanish intellectuals, and did not return until the fall of General Primo de Rivera's dictatorship in 1930. He was effectively removed from his post again by Franco during the Spanish Civil War. He was placed under house arrest in 1936, where he remained until his death.

For Unamuno, art was a means to express spiritual dilemmas. In his poetry and in his novels, he developed the same themes: spiritual anguish, the pain provoked by the silence of God, time and death.

Table of contents
1 Narrative
2 Poetry
3 Drama

Narrative

His narrative production, in chronological order, is as follows:

The novel centers on a heroic priest who has lost his faith in God.

Poetry

In his meter and rhyme, he was always attracted to traditional meters and, though his first poems eliminated rhyme, he returned to them later in life.

Among his outstanding poetic works are: Poesías (Poems), (1907), Rosario de sonetos líricos (Rosary of Lyric Sonnets) (1911), El Cristo de Velázquez (The Christ of Velazquez) (1920), Andanzas y visiones españolas (1922), Rimas de dentro (Rhymes from Within) (1923), Rimas de un poeta desconocido (Rhymes from an Unknown Poet) (1924), De Fuertevenra a París (From Fuertevenra to Paris) (1925), Romancero del destierro (Ballads of Exile), (1928), y Cancionero (Songbook''), (1953), published posthumously.

From his first book, Poesías, he outlined the themes that would dominate his poetics: religious conflict, Spain, and domestic life.

El Cristo de Velázquez is a religious work, divided in four points, where Unamuno analyzes the figure of Christ from different perspectives: as a symbol of sacrifice and redemption, as a reflection on his Biblical names (Christ the myth, Christ the man on the cross, Christ, God, Christ the Eucharist), as poetic meaning, as painted by Velázquez, etc.

Andanzas y visiones españolas is something of a travel book, in which Unamuno expresses profound emotion and experiments with landscape both evocative and realistic (a theme typical of his generation of writers).

Drama

Unamuno's dramatic production presents a philosophical progression. These such as individual spirituality, faith as a "vital lie", and the problem of a double personality were at the center of La esfinge (1898), La verdad (Truth), (1899), and El otro (The Other), (1932). In 1934, he wrote El hermano Juan o El mundo es teatro (Brother Juan or The World is a Theater).

Unamuno's theater is schematic: he did away with artifice and focused only on the conflicts and passions that affect the characters. This austerity was influenced by classical Greek theater. What mattered to him was the presentation of the drama going on inside of the characters.

By symbolizing passion and creating a theater austere both in word and presentation, Unamuno's theater opened the way for the rennaisance of Spanish theater undertaken by Ramón Valle-Inclán, Azorín, and, later, Federico García Lorca.