Carmen Conde Abellán

Carmen Conde Abellán (15 August 1907 – 8 January 1996) was a Spanish poet, narrative writer and teacher. In 1931 she founded the first Popular University of Cartagena, along with her husband Antonio Oliver Belmás. She was also the first woman to become an academic numerary of the Real Academia Española,[1] where she delivered her induction speech in 1979.

Carmen Conde Abellán
Born(1907-08-15)15 August 1907
Cartagena, Spain
Died8 January 1996(1996-01-08) (aged 88)
Madrid, Spain
Pen nameFlorentina del Mar
OccupationPoet, narrative writer, teacher

Biography

At the age of 7 she moved with her family to Melilla, where she lived until 1920. The memoir from that period were collected in Empezando la vida. In 1923 she passed the competitive exam for Auxiliary at the Drafting Room of the Sociedad Española de Construcción Naval, where she started to work. She began her contributions to local newspapers one year later. At the age of 19 she started her studies in Education at a teacher training college, the Escuela Normal de Maestras de Murcia.

In 1927 she met the Spanish poet Antonio Oliver Belmás, formalizing their relationship. She wrote in Ley: (entregas de capricho) and also in Obra en marcha: diario poético in 1928, both magazines published by Juan Ramón Jiménez for a minority audience. In 1929 she wrote her fourth work, Brocal, and she finished her Education studies at the Escuela Normal de Albacete in 1930. On 5 December 1931 she married Antonio and they both founded the first Popular University of Cartagena. In 1933 they both created the magazine Presencia, a body at this institution. The University had an adults' library, children's library as well as educational cinema, and it organized events such as conference programs, art exhibitions, etc. It was supported by the Patronato de Misiones Pedagógicas. Carmen also worked as a teacher in the Escuela Nacional de Párvulos at El Retén.

In 1934 Carmen Conde published Júbilos, prologued by Gabriela Mistral and illustrated by Norah Borges. She worked as Inspector-Monitor of Studies at El Pardo Orphanage, until she resigned in 1935. Over this year, the couple contributed to national newspapers like El Sol, as well as to other Spanish American serial publications.

When the Spanish Civil War broke out, her husband joined the republican troops, leading the Popular Front Radio Station num. 2. Carmen followed him through several Andalusian cities, but she returned to Cartagena to look after her mother. The Civil War outbreak forced them in July 1936 to give up the invitation from Gabriela Mistral (by then Consul of Chile in Lisboa), before traveling to France and Belgium, to study folklore institutions in those countries, for which she had obtained a grant. Likewise, she attended courses at the Faculty of Letters in Valencia, passing the competitive exam for Librarian, although she never practiced.

In 1937 Conde began an intimate relationship with Amanda Junquera Butler, whom she had met the previous year. Because of legal and social conditions at the time, neither publicly acknowledged their relationship, nor divorced.[2] Marked by authorities as a threat because she was a pro-Republican intellectual, Conde fled at the end of the war to Madrid with Junquera and went into hiding.[3] Her husband was exiled to live in isolation in Murcia, but Conde continued to live with Junquera and her husband, Cayetano Alcázar Molina, in Madrid and San Lorenzo de El Escorial until 1945.[3][4] She managed to communicate with her husband through José Ballester Nicolás, director of La Verdad (a regional newspaper in Murcia) and Correos employee. In 1945, Oliver was allowed to move to Madrid and Conde joined him in an apartment, though their relationship was in name only.[2][3]

Her husband Antonio Oliver died in 1968, and Conde moved to Junquero's home in Madrid permanently.[5][6] Three years later, Carmen promoted the complete compilation of his works. On 28 January 1979 she was elected as numeric member of the Real Academia Española, taking the "k" seat, and delivering her induction speech entitled "Poesía ante el tiempo y la inmortalidad". Known primarily as a poet and inspiration to a younger generation of writers, she also published eight novels.[7]

She spent the last years of her life, between 1992 and 1996, living in an old people's residency in Majadahonda (Madrid). In 1992 she wrote her testament leaving the complete collection of literary works by her and her husband to the City Hall of Cartagena, her hometown. Conde acknowledged her relationship with Junquero in her autobiography and dedicated many works to her partner and muse during her lifetime.[2] In 2007, José Luis Ferris published Carmen Conde: vida, pasión y verso de una escritora olvidada (Carmen Conde: Life, Passion and Verse of a Forgotten Writer), which publicly chronicled the relationship of Conde and Junquera.[8]

Tributes

gollark: As all haskell programmers are.
gollark: (Note: do not treat this as at all reliable in any way)
gollark: Isn't it just 10 times the regular cooler or whatever, so 1200?
gollark: Or 80 ticks (4 seconds). Who knows, really.
gollark: https://github.com/turbodiesel4598/NuclearCraft/blob/a39b2178a164eacbdfa8d94c18180e5e31688c14/src/main/java/nc/tile/fluid/TileActiveCooler.java

References

  1. Prieto de Paula, Ángel L. (August 11, 2007). "Carmen Conde, la primera mujer". El País (in Spanish). Prisa. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  2. Sibbald, K. M. (Autumn 2010). "Outing and Autobiography (Carmen Conde and María Elena Walsh)". Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos. Edmonton, Alberta: University of Alberta for the Canadian Association of Hispanists. 35 (1): 205–228. ISSN 0384-8167. JSTOR 23055675.
  3. Andrews, Jean (2016). "Poetry and Silence in Post-Civil-War Spain: Carmen Conde, Lucía Sánchez Saornil, and Pilar de Valderrama". In Bragança, Manuel; Tame, Peter (eds.). The Long Aftermath: Cultural Legacies of Europe at War, 1936–2016. New York, New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 40–59. ISBN 978-1-78238-154-9.
  4. Sánchez Gil, Neri-Carmen (November 2002). "Carmen Conde, la poetisa del siglo XX español" [Carmen Conde, the Spanish Twentieth-Century Poet]. Tonos Digital (in Spanish). Murcia, Spain: Universidad de Murcia (4). ISSN 1577-6921. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  5. Prieto de Paula, Ángel L. (10 August 2007). "Carmen Conde, la primera mujer" [Carmen Conde, The First Woman]. El País (in Spanish). Madrid, Spain. Archived from the original on 30 May 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  6. García Cárcel, Ricardo (2 June 2019). "Carmen Conde, la fuerza de la voluntad" [Carmen Conde: The Force of Will]. Crónica Global (in Spanish). Barcelona, Spain. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  7. Nalbone, Lisa (23 January 2012). The Novels of Carmen Conde: An Expression of Feminine Subjectivity. Hispanic Monographs. Juan de la Cuesta. p. 264. doi:10.1080/00497878.2013.772856. ISBN 9781588712127. S2CID 143391237.
  8. "Ferris revela la historia de amor entre Carmen Conde y Amanda" [Ferris Reveals the Love Story between Carmen Conde and Amanda Junquera]. Diario Información (in Spanish). Alicante, Spain. Prensa Alicantina. 19 June 2007. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  9. "El diván de la puerta dorada". ABC (in Spanish). 7 July 1984. p. XI. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  10. "Carmen Conde's 111th Birthday". Google. 15 August 2018.
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