José Vasconcelos

José Vasconcelos Calderón (28 February 1882 – 30 June 1959), called the "cultural caudillo" of the Mexican Revolution[5], was an important Mexican writer, philosopher, and politician.[6] He is one of the most influential and controversial personalities in the development of modern Mexico. His philosophy of the "cosmic race" affected all aspects of Mexican sociocultural, political, and economic policies.

José Vasconcelos Calderón
José Vasconcelos in 1914
1st Secretary of Public Education
In office
28 September 1921[1]  27 July 1924
PresidentÁlvaro Obregón
Succeeded byBernardo J. Gastélum
Rector of the National Autonomous University of Mexico
In office
1920–1921
Preceded byBalbino Dávalos
Succeeded byMariano Silva
Personal details
Born
José Vasconcelos Calderón

(1882-02-28)28 February 1882[2]
Oaxaca, Mexico
Died30 June 1959(1959-06-30) (aged 77)
Mexico City, Mexico
NationalityMexican
Political partyNational Anti-Reelectionist Party
Spouse(s)Serafina Miranda (married in 1906, died 1942)[3] Esperanza Cruz (married 1942).[4]
ChildrenJosé and Carmen;[2] Héctor[4]
Alma materNational School of Jurisprudence (ENJ)
ProfessionWriter, philosopher and politician

Early life

Vasconcelos was born in Oaxaca, Oaxaca, on February 28, 1882, the son of a customs official.[7] José's mother, a pious Catholic, died when José was 16. The family moved to the border town of Piedras Negras, Coahuila, where he grew up attending school in Eagle Pass, Texas.[8] He became bilingual in English and Spanish,[9] which opened doors to the English-speaking world. The family also lived in Campeche while the northern border area was unstable. His time in living on the Texas border likely contributed to fostering his idea of the Mexican "cosmic race" and rejection of Anglo culture.[10]

Private life

At 24, he married Serafina Miranda of Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, in 1906. Their children were José Ignacio and Carmen. He also had a long-term relationship with Elena Arizmendi Mejia and throughout his life many other shorter liaisons, including one with Berta Singerman.[11] His troubled relationship with Antonieta Rivas Mercado led to her suicide inside Paris's Notre Dame Cathedral in 1931. When his wife of forty years died in 1942, their daughter Carmen is reported to have said, "When the coffin was lowered into the ground, Vasconcelos sobbed bitterly. At that moment he must have known and felt who he really had as a wife; perhaps they were tears of belated repentance."[12] He remarried the pianist Esperanza Cruz and they had a child, Héctor.[13]

Mexican Revolution

José Vasconcelos

Although Vasconcelos was interested in studying philosophy, the Porfiriato's universities focused on the sciences, influenced by French positivism. Vasconcelos attended the National Preparatory School, an elite high school in Mexico City, and he went on to Escuela de Jurisprudencia in Mexico City (1905). In law school, he became involved with radical students organized as the Ateneo de la Juventud (Youth Atheneum).[14] The Ateneo de Juventud was led by a Dominican citizen, Pedro Henríquez Ureña, who had read Uruguayan essayist José Enrique Rodó's Ariel, an influential work published in 1900 that was opposed to Anglo cultural influence but also emphasized the redemptive power of education.[15] The Ateneo de la Juventud had a diverse membership, composed of university professors, artists, other professionals, and students. Some other members included Isidro Fabela and Diego Rivera.[16] Opposed to the Díaz regime, it formulated arguments against it and its emphasis on positivism by employing French spiritualism, which articulated "a new vision of the relationship between individual and society."[14]

After graduating from law school, he joined a law firm of Warner, John, and Galston in Washington, DC. Vasconcelos joined the local Anti-Re-election Club in Washington, D.C..[14] It supported the democratic movement to oust the longtime Mexican President Porfirio Díaz in 1910 and was headed by Francisco I. Madero, the presidential candidate of the Anti-Re-election Party. Vasconcelos returned to Mexico City to participate more directly in the anti-re-election movement, became one of the party's secretaries, and edited its newspaper, El Antireelectionista.[14]

After Díaz was ousted by revolutionary violence that was followed by the election of Madero as elected president of Mexico, Vasconcelos led a structural change at the National Preparatory School. He changed the academic programs and broke with the past positivistic influence.

After Madero's assassination in February 1913, Vasconcelos joined the broad movement to defeat the military regime of Victoriano Huerta. Soon, Vasconcelos was forced into exile in Paris, where he met Julio Torri, Doctor Atl, Gabriele D'Annunzio, and other contemporaryintellectuals and artists. After Huerta was ousted in July 1914, Vasconcelos returned to Mexico.

The Convention of Aguascalientes in 1914, the failed attempt of anti-Huerta regime to find a political solution, which split the factions. The leader of the Constitutionalists, Venustiano Carranza, and General Álvaro Obregón split with more radical revolutionaries, especially Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata. Vasconcelos chose the side of the Convention and served as Minister of Education during the brief presidential period of Eulalio Gutiérrez. Villa was defeated by the Constitutionalist Army under Obregón in the Battle of Celaya in 1915, and Vasconcelos went into exile again. Venustiano Carranza became president of Mexico (1915–1920), but he was ousted and killed by the Sonoran generals who had helped put him in power.

Rector of National University

Logo of the National University of Mexico that was designed by Vasconcelos as its rector

Vasconcelos returned to Mexico during the interim presidency of Sonoran Adolfo de la Huerta and was named rector the National Autonomous University of Mexico (1920)[17][18] As rector, he had a great deal of power, but he accrued even more by ignoring the standard structures, such as the University Council, to govern the institution.[19] Rather, he exercised personal power and began implementing his vision of the function of the university. He redesigned the logo of the university to show a map of Latin America, with the phrase "Por mi raza hablará el espíritu" (The spirit will speak for my race), an influence of Rodó's arielismo.[20] It also had an eagle and a condor and a background of the volcanic mountains in central Mexico. Vasconcelos is said to have declared, "I have not come to govern the University but to ask the University to work for the people."[21]

Secretary of Public Education

Statue of José Vasconcelos in Mexico City

When Obregón became president in 1920, he created the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) in 1921 and named Vasconcelos as its head.[22] Under Obregón, the national budget had two key expenditures; not surprisingly, the military was one, but the other was education.[23] Creating the Secretariat entailed changing the Constitution of 1917, and so Obregón's government had to muster support from lawmakers. Vasconcelos traveled throughour Mexico while he was rector of the university to seek that support. His effort succeeded, and Vasconcelos was named head of the new cabinet-level secretariat in July 1921.[24]

His tenure at the Secretariat gave him a powerful position to implement his vision of Mexico's history, especially the Mexican Revolution.

Vasconcelos printed huge numbers of texts for the expanded public school system, but in the 1920s, there was no agreement about how the Mexican Revolution should be portrayed and so earlier history texts by Justo Sierra, the head of the ministry of public education during the Díaz regime, continued to be used.[25]

Although Vasconcelos was no advocate of Mexican indigenous culture, as Secretary of Education, he sent Brazil a statue of the last Aztec emperor, Cuauhtemoc, for their centennial celebrations of independence in 1923 to the disdain and the amazement of the South American recipients.[26]

Later life

He resigned in 1924 because of his opposition to President Plutarco Elías Calles. He worked for the education of the masses and sought to make the nation's education on secular, civic, and Pan-American (americanista) lines. He ran for president in 1929 but lost to Pascual Ortiz Rubio in a controversial election and again left the country.

He later directed the National Library of Mexico (1940) and presided over the Mexican Institute of Hispanic Culture (1948).

Philosophical thought

Small statue (bust) of Jose Vasconcelos at the Instituto Campechano, Mexico.

Vasconcelos' first writings on philosophy are passionate reactions against the formal, positivistic education at the National Preparatory School, formerly under the influence of Porfirian thinkers like Justo Sierra and Gabino Barreda.

A second period of productivity was fed by a first disappointment in the political field, after Madero's murder. In 1919, he wrote a long essay on Pythagorism, as a dissertation on the links between harmony and rhythm and its eventual explanation into a frame of aesthetic monism. As he argued that only by the means of rhythm can humans able to know the world without any intermediation, he proposed that the minimal aspects of cognition are conditioned by a degree of sympathy with the natural "vibration" of things. In that manner, he thought that the auditive categories of knowledge were much higher than the visual ones.

Later, Vasconcelos developed an argument for the mixing of races, as a natural and desirable direction for humankind. That work, known as La raza cósmica ('The Cosmic Race'), would eventually contribute to further studies on ethnic values as an ethic and for the consideration of ethnic variety as an aesthetic source. Finally, between 1931 and 1940, he tried to consolidate his proposals by publishing his main topics organized in three main works: Metafísica ('Metaphysics'), Ética ('Ethics'), and Estética ('Aesthetics').

In the final part of his life, he gradually fell into a deeply Catholic political conservatism. Before the Second World War, he had begun writing sympathetically about Francisco Franco, and he retracted some of his earlier liberal positions. One of his last published works, Letanías del atardecer (1957) is a pessimistic tract that hinted that the use of nuclear weapons might be necessary because of the postwar order.

Influence

José Vasconcelos (left) with José Urquidi, Rafael Zubarán Capmany and Peredo.

Vasconcelos is often referred to as the father of the indigenismo philosophy. In recent times, it has come under criticism from Native Americans because of its negative implications concerning indigenous peoples. To an extent, his philosophy argued for a new, "modern" mestizo people, at the cost of cultural assimilation for all ethnic groups. His research on the nature of Mexican modern identity had a direct influence on the young writers, poets, anthropologists, and philosophers who wrote on this subject. He also influenced the point of view of Carlos Pellicer with respect to several aesthetic assumptions reflected in his books. Together, Pellicer and Vasconcelos made a trip through the Middle East (1928–1929) and were looking for the "spiritual basis" of Byzantine architecture.

Other works, particularly La raza cósmica and Metafísica, had a decisive influence in Octavio Paz's El laberinto de la soledad ('The Labyrinth of Solitude'), with anthropological and aesthetic implications. Paz wrote that Vasconcelos was "the teacher" who had educated hundreds of young Latin American intellectuals during his many trips to Central and South America. Vasconcelos was a guest lecturer at Columbia University and Princeton University, but his influence on new generations in the United States gradually decreased. Nevertheless, his work La raza cósmica has been used by Chicano and Mexican-American movements since the 1970s, which assert the reconquista ('retaking' or literally 'reconquest') of the American Southwest, based on their Mexican ancestry.

Contributions to and education

Vasconcelos caussd the National Symphonic Orchestra (1920) and the Symphonic Orchestra of Mexico (1928) to be officially endorsed. Muralists Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros were given the right to paint the inner walls of the most important public buildings in Mexico (such as the National Palace in Mexico City), creating the Mexican mural movement.

Quotations

Inside the "Jose Vasconcelos" library; Mexico City.

"[T]he leaders of Latin American independence ... strove to free the slaves, declared the equality of all men by natural law; the social and civic equality of whites, blacks and Indians. In an instant of historical crisis, they formulated the transcendental mission assigned to that region of the Globe: the mission of fusing the peoples ethnically and spiritually." (La raza cósmica, 1948)

"Each of the great nations of History has believed itself to be the final and chosen one. ... The Hebrews founded the belief in their superiority on oracles and divine promises. The English found theirs on observations relative to domestic animals. From the observation of cross-breeding and hereditary varieties in such animals, Darwinism emerged. First, as a modest zoological theory, then as social biology that confers definitive preponderance to the English above all races. Every imperialism needs a justifying philosophy". (La raza cósmica, 1948)

"Hitler, although he disposes of absolute power, finds himself a thousand leagues from Caesarism. Power does not come to Hitler from the military base, but from the book that inspires the troops from the top. Hitler's power is not owed to the troops, nor the battalions, but to his own discussions... Hitler represents, ultimately, an idea, the German idea, so often humiliated previously by French militarism and English perfidy. Truthfully, we find civilian governed 'democracies' fighting against Hitler. But they are democracies in name only". ("La Inteligencia se impone", Timon 16; June 8, 1940)

Publications

Vasconcelos was a prolific author, writing in a variety of genres, especially philosophy, but also autobiography.

Philosophy

  • Pitágoras ('Pythagoras'), 1919
  • El monismo estético ('The Aesthetic Monism'), 1919
  • La raza cósmica ('The Cosmic Race'), 1925
  • Indología ('Indology'), 1926
  • Metafísica ('Metaphysics'), 1929
  • Pesimismo alegre ('Cheerful Pessimism'), 1931
  • Estética ('Aesthetics'), 1936
  • Ética ('Ethics'), 1939
  • Historia del pensamiento filosófico ('A History of Philosophical Thought'), 1937
  • Lógica orgánica ('Organic Logic'), 1945

Other publications

  • Teoría dinámica del derecho ('Dynamic Theory of Rights'), 1907
  • La intelectualidad mexicana ('The Intellectuality of Mexico'), 1916
  • Ulises criollo ('Creole Ulysses), 1935
  • La tormenta ('The Storm'), 1936
  • Breve historia de México ('A Brief History of Mexico'), 1937
  • El desastre ('The Disaster'), 1938
  • El proconsulado ('The Proconsulated'), 1939
  • El ocaso de mi vida ('The Sunset of My Life'), 1957
  • La Flama. Los de Arriba en la Revolución. Historia y Tragedia ('The Flame. Those of Above in the Revolution. History and Tragedy'), 1959
  • Las Cartas Políticas de José Vasconcelos ('The Political Letters of José Vasconcelos'), 1959[27]
  • Obras completas ('Complete Works'), 1957–1961[28]

Notes

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    See also

    References

    1. Morales Gómez, Daniel A.; Torres, Carlos A. (1990). "The State and Education in Mexico". The state, corporatist politics, and educational policy making in Mexico. Praeger. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-275-93484-2.
    2. Martin, Percy Alvin, ed. (1935). Who's Who in Latin America: A Biographical Dictionary of the Outstanding Living Men and Women of Spanish America and Brazil. Stanford University Press. p. 417. ISBN 9780804723152. Retrieved December 6, 2009.
    3. Fell, Claude (2000). "Notas explicativas". Ulises; Criollo. Colección Archivos (in Spanish). 3. Vasconcelos, José. Editorial Universidad de Costa Rica. pp. 526–573. ISBN 9782914273008. Retrieved December 6, 2009.
    4. Krauze, Enrique (2011). Redeemers: Ideas and Power in Latin America. Translated by Heifetz, Hank. New York: Harper Collins. p. 84.
    5. Krauze, Redeemers; chapter 3 is subtitled "José Vasconcelos, the Cultural Caudillo"
    6. "José Vasconcelos". Biografías y Vidas: La enciclopedia biográfica en línea.
    7. Krauze, Redeemers; p. 53
    8. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 53>
    9. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 53
    10. Vera Cuspinera, Margarita (1997). "José Vasconcelos". Encyclopedia of Mexico. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 1519.
    11. Krauze, Redeemers, pp. 55, 67.
    12. quoted in Krauze, Redeemers, p. 84.
    13. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 84.
    14. Vera Cuspinera, "José Vasconcelos", p. 1519.
    15. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 54.
    16. Hart, John Mason (1987). Revolutionary Mexico: The Coming and Process of the Mexican Revolution. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 95.
    17. "José Vasconcelos". Texas Archival Resources Online. University of Texas Library.
    18. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 61
    19. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 62.
    20. Krauze, Redeemers, p. 62
    21. Quoted in Krauze, Redeemers, p. 62.
    22. "José Vasconcelos". Encyclopaedia Britannica (online ed.).
    23. Dulles, John W. F. (1961). Yesterday in Mexico: A Chronicle of the Revolution, 1919-1936. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 118.
    24. Dulles, Yesterday in Mexico, p. 119.
    25. Benjamin, Thomas (2000). La Revolución: Mexico's Great Revolution as Memory, Myth, and History. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 141.
    26. Gillingham, Paul (2011). Cuauhtémoc's Bones: Forging National Identity in Modern Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. p. 173.
    27. Vasconcelos, José (1959). Taracena, Alfonso (ed.). Las Cartas Políticas de José Vasconcelos. Mexico City: Editoria Librería.
    28. Vasconcelos, José. Obras completas. Mexico City: Libreros Mexicanos Unidos.
    29. "Awards Education". ConsejoCulturalMundial.org. World Cultural Council. Archived from the original on June 7, 2015.

    Further reading

    • Bar Lewaw, Itzhak. Introducción Crítico-Biografía a José Vasconcelos. Madrid: Ediciones Latinoamericanas, 1965.
    • Bar Lewaw, Itzhak. José Vasconcelos. Mexico City: Clásica Selecta Editora Libreria, 1965.
    • Carballo, Emmanuel. Diecinueve protagonistas de la literatura mexicana del siglo XX. Mexico City: Empresas Editoriales, 1965; see especially 17–47.
    • Cárdenas Noriega, Joaquín, José Vasconcelos, 1882-1982: Educador, político y profeta. Mexico City: Oceano, 1982.
    • De Beer, Gabriela. José Vasconcelos and His World. New York: Las Américas 1966.
    • De Beer, Gabriela. "El ateneo y los atenistas: un examen retrospectivo". Revista Iberoamericana 148–149, Vol 55 (1989): 737–749.
    • Garciadiego Dantan, Javier. "De Justo Sierra a Vasconcelos. La Universidad Nacional durante la revolución mexicana". Historia Mexicana, vol. 46. No. 4. Homenaje a don Edmundo O'Gorman (April–June 1997), pp. 769–819.
    • Haddox, John H. Vasconcelos of Mexico, Philosopher and Prophet. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967.
    • Enrique Krauze. Redeemers: Ideas and Power in Latin America, chapter 3, "José Vasconcelos, the Cultural Caudillo". New York: Harper Collins 2011.
    • Lucas, Jeffrey Kent. The Rightward Drift of Mexico's Former Revolutionaries: The Case of Antonio Díaz Soto y Gama. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010.
    • Molloy, Sylvia. "First Memories, First Myths: Vasconcelos' Ulises criollo", in At Face Value: Autobiographical Writing in Spanish America. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1991, pp. 186–208.
    • Vera Cuspinera, Margarita. El pensamiento filosófico de Vasconcelos. Mexico City: Extemporáneos, 1979.
    • Vera Cuspinera, Margarita. "José Vasconcelos", in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, pp. 1519–21.
    • Ward, Thomas. "José Vasconcelos y su cosmomología de la raza", in La resistencia cultural: la nación en el ensayo de las Américas. Lima, Peru: Editorial Universitaria URP, 2004, pp. 246–254.
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