197:
concepts underpinning Borges' fiction come directly from
Macedonio. These include the questioning of space and time and their continuity; the confusion of dreaming and wakefulness; the unreliability of memory and the importance of forgetfulness; the slipperiness (or nonexistence) of personal identity; the denial of originality and the emphasis on texts as being recyclings and translations of prior texts; and the questioning and commingling of the roles of author, reader, editor and commentator.
321:, after its sixteenth issue. The two events may not be coincidental. From 1927 onward, Borges not only started to write, publish and promote his characteristic short fiction (beginning with "Hombre de la esquina rosada"), he aggressively renounced his prior aesthetic production and put considerable energy into burying it forever. A number of sources (
299:, both in Buenos Aires bars and cafés and in a shack Macedonio sometimes borrowed on a friend's ranch outside the city. He also was one of the collaborators in Macedonio's burlesque campaigns for the presidency of the Argentine Republic (in 1921 and again in 1927), episodes which apparently gave rise to the analogous fictional campaign in
325:
in particular) suggest that Borges began to regard most of his early writings, and the ideas behind them, as potentially pernicious, especially in the hands of nationalists. Supporting this notion is the fact that many of Borges's stories in which
Macedonio's influence is most evident imply a warning
133:
His wife died in 1920, and their children were left in the care of grandparents and aunts. Macedonio abandoned the profession of a lawyer. On the return of the Borges family from Europe in 1921, he renewed his friendship with his old friend, and also began a friendship with Jorge Luis Borges, at this
265:
border. During the years prior to 1921, Macedonio married, started a law practice and went about raising a family. This idyll came to an end when
Macedonio's wife, Elena de Obieta, died suddenly in 1920. Macedonio then shuttered his law practice, dismantled his household and, about the same time as
188:
Macedonio was Jorge Luis Borges's most important
Argentine mentor and influence. The relationship between the writers, however, was far more complex than Borges or his contemporaries represented it to be. In his later years, Borges made a point of naming Macedonio as an early influence whom, in the
310:
The relationship between Borges and
Macedonio appears to have begun to deteriorate around 1927 or 1928, when correspondence (published and analyzed by Carlos García) indicates a rift between them. This is also about the time that Borges made his famous break with the avant-garde and pronounced the
240:
The relationship between these two men began in earnest in 1921, when Borges returned to Buenos Aires with his family after their extended stay in
Switzerland (and travels elsewhere in Europe), where he had completed his education. Borges' father, Jorge Guillermo Borges Haslam, had been a close
196:
Recent studies by Ana
Camblong, Julio Prieto, Daniel Attala and Todd S. Garth, among others, indicate that Macedonio's literary impact on Borges was far more profound and enduring than Borges ever admitted, and that Borges went to great pains to hide this influence. Many of the most fundamental
189:
exuberance of his youth, Borges imitated "to the point of plagiarism." At the same time, Borges denied that
Macedonio possessed any literary talent or importance, reinforcing the long-held perception of the older man as a kind of local
200:
These influences extend to thematic material. Such themes include the conceit of an alternative, fictional dimension, elaborated anonymously in collaboration, that invades the known, tangible world (Borges'
229:), there is little question that the two Argentines developed some of their most characteristic and enduring ideas together, in conversation, throughout the 1920s. Macedonio appears explicitly in Borges' "
326:
against concepts and principles
Macedonio represented: absolute relativism; the priority of thought, emotion and imagination over a nominal existence; and the implicit heroism of a hermetic existence.
119:, with whom he maintained a correspondence. In 1898, he was admitted to the bar, and in 1899 he married Elena de Obieta, with whom he had four children (Macedonio, Adolfo, Maite, plus one)
69:, he is commonly referred to by his first name only) was the son of Macedonio Fernández, farmer and military officer, and Rosa del Mazo Aguilar Ramos. In 1887, he enrolled in the Argentine
31:
73:. It is believed that he is a descendant of the Macedonio family of Naples, Italy who claimed descent from the Macedonian dynasty of Eastern Rome and Philip II of ancient Macedonia.
336:
No toda es vigilia la de los ojos abiertos; arreglo de papeles que dejó un personaje de novela creado por el arte, Deunamor el no existente caballero, el estudioso de su esperanza
230:
242:
213:); and the hermetic world of immigrant working girls who must negotiate the city on their own, secret terms based purely on instinct and passion (Borges' "
257:. This plan apparently never went beyond an exploratory visit the three made around 1897 to a plantation the Molina y Vedia family owned in the Argentine
130:
published two decades later). In 1910, he obtained the position of public prosecutor in the
Juzgado Letrado de Posadas, which he held for several years.
221:). While it is evident both men were inspired by ideas they read in the works of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century philosophers (specifically
303:. In addition, Borges was responsible for urging Macedonio to publish at least one of the two book-length works printed in Macedonio's lifetime,
49:
and other avant-garde Argentine writers. Seventeen years of his correspondence with Borges was published in 2000. His published poetry includes "
45:
writer, humorist and philosopher. His writings included novels, stories, poetry, journalism, and works not easily classified. He was a mentor to
781:
275:
were drawn to Macedonio as a mentor and figurehead who could serve as an anchor to the nascent Buenos Aires avant-garde and a foil to
667:
Garth, Todd S. and Heather Dubnick. "Uninvited inversions: Borges, Macedonio and the genesis of "Tlön , Uqbar , Orbis Tertius"". In:
736:
771:
241:
companion to Macedonio and attended law school with him. Upon graduating law school, Macedonio, the elder Borges, and companion
796:
791:
661:
283:
movement of a generation earlier. Macedonio made noteworthy, if infrequent, contributions to the literary gatherings of the
511:
266:
he renewed his friendship with the now adult Jorge Luis Borges, embarked on a life as an idiosyncratic writer-philosopher.
766:
531:
322:
632:
595:
570:
498:
479:
452:
439:
426:
413:
387:
379:
371:
70:
538:
165:
786:
180:
In 1947, Macedonio moved into the home of his son Adolfo de Obieta, where he lived for the rest of his life.
202:
776:
317:
271:
127:
100:
17:
638:
Garth, Todd S. "Confused Oratory: Borges, Macedonio and the Creation of the Mythological Author ".
146:
234:
66:
447:, Buenos Aires, Corregidor, 1974 (Obras completas, vol. III; Adolfo de Obieta, editor); (1990)
85:
761:
756:
434:
Buenos Aires, Corregidor, 1974 (Obras completas, vol. V; Adolfo de Obieta, editor); (1998)
161:"Novela de la Eterna" y la Niña del dolor, la "Dulce-persona" de un amor que no fue sabido
8:
315:, essentially forcing the closure of its most important publication, the little magazine
222:
93:
254:
99:
In 1897 he was granted a degree as a doctor of jurisprudence by the law faculty of the
559:. Buenos Aires, Corregidor, 1976. (Obras completas, vol. II, Alicia Borinsky, editor).
193:
philosopher, specific to Argentina and constitutive of an Argentine mythic dimension.
112:
657:
628:
591:
566:
544:
527:
507:
494:
475:
460:. Buenos Aires, Corregidor, 1975 (Obras completas, vol. VI; Adolfo de Obieta, editor)
448:
435:
422:
409:
383:
375:
367:
150:
135:
89:
46:
276:
108:
740:
293:
of writers and artists. Borges was an active participant in Macedonio's intimate
190:
750:
654:
Macedonio Fernández, the Argentine Avant-Garde, and modernity in Buenos Aires
290:
226:
116:
115:. He was a personal friend of physician, journalist, politician, and writer
690:
206:
50:
643:
258:
246:
80:, a series of critical essays on customs and manners later included in
688:
250:
214:
42:
30:
295:
285:
262:
169:(published posthumously in 1967); in 1941 he published, in Chile
62:
350:, with a prologue by Natalicio González. México, Guarania, 1953.
715:
Borges , Jorges Luis. Trans. Mildred Boyer and Harold Morland.
396:. Advertencia de Adolfo de Obieta. Buenos Aires, CEAL, 1967.
394:
No toda es vigilia la de los ojos abiertos y otros escritos
92:), he was interested in psychology and in the philosopher
682:
563:
Correspondencia, 1922-1939 : crónica de una amistad
76:
In 1891–1892, as a university student, he published in
614:
Macedonio Fernández and the Spanish American New Novel
458:
Museo de la Novela de la Eterna; primera novela buena
122:
In 1904 he published some poems in a magazine called
743: (archived October 24, 2007), RATACRUEL (e-zine)
625:
Reflexion und Negation als Bestimmung der Modernität
543:
translated by Margaret Schwartz (2010) published by
526:edited by Jo Anne Engelbert, Latitudes Press 1984,
524:Macedonio : selected writings in translation
358:Papeles de recienvenido y continuación de la nada
748:
607:Retórica y política de los discursos paradójicos
354:Papeles de Recienvenido. Continuación de la nada
402:. Buenos Aires, Corregidor, 1972. 2a. ed. 1990.
209:by turning it into a novel, a component of his
432:Adriana Buenos Aires : última novela mala
689:The Editors of The Encyclopædia Britannica .
466:Relato : cuentos, poemas y misceláneas
305:No toda es vigilia la de los ojos abiertos
143:No toda es vigilia la de los ojos abiertos
27:Argentine writer, humorist and philosopher
719:. University of Texas Press, 1985, p. 25.
517:
656:. University Press, Lewisburg, Pa 2005,
590:. Plaza & Janés, Buenos Aires 2002,
205:" and Macedonio's campaign to transform
41:(1 June 1874 – 10 February 1952) was an
29:
183:
14:
749:
128:more famous magazine of the same name
644:https://www.jstor.org/stable/3251624
642:116 (2) (2001): 350–370 Stable URL:
782:20th-century Argentine philosophers
24:
576:
504:Macedonio : memorias errantes
25:
808:
726:
550:
627:. Lang, Frankfurt am Main 1976,
621:Macedonio Fernández (1874–1952)
269:Borges and other members of the
233:," in which the two discuss the
772:Burials at La Recoleta Cemetery
406:Manera de una psique sin cuerpo
364:Museo de la novela de la eterna
211:Museo de la Novela de la Eterna
173:, and in 1944 a new edition of
166:Museo de la Novela de la Eterna
103:. In this period, he wrote for
709:
695:Encyclopædia Britannica Online
565:with Jorge Luis Borges (2000)
107:a socialist daily directed by
13:
1:
153:; the next year he published
797:20th-century Argentine poets
792:19th-century Argentine poets
691:"Ultraism Literary Movement"
609:. Buenos Aires: Eudeba 2003.
539:The Museum of Eterna's Novel
7:
616:. New York: NYU Press 1978.
84:. Like his intimate friend
10:
813:
272:generación martinfierrista
245:hatched a plan to found a
203:Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius
101:University of Buenos Aires
767:Writers from Buenos Aires
697:. Encyclopædia Britannica
289:movement and the related
231:Dialogue about a Dialogue
675:
619:Flammersfeld, Waltraud:
400:Cuadernos de todo y nada
329:
155:Papeles de Recienvenido.
71:Colegio Nacional Central
588:La biografía impossible
342:Una novela que comienza
235:immortality of the soul
175:Papeles de Recienvenido
171:Una novela que comienza
56:
541:(The First Good Novel)
518:In English translation
86:Jorge Guillermo Borges
35:
640:Modern Language Notes
163:, an anticipation of
159:En 1938 he published
147:Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz
141:In 1928 he published
33:
787:Argentine male poets
650:The self of the city
612:Engelbert, Jo Anne:
249:colony based on the
243:Julio Molina y Vedia
219:Adriana Buenos Aires
184:Macedonio and Borges
145:, at the request of
67:Felisberto Hernández
777:Argentine humorists
737:Macedonio Fernández
671:26 (2008): 157–170.
584:Macedonio Fernández
311:death of Argentine
94:Arthur Schopenhauer
39:Macedonio Fernández
34:Macedonio Fernández
669:Variaciones Borges
217:" and Macedonio's
53:" ("I believed").
36:
735:Roberto Bardini,
662:978-0-8387-5615-7
545:Open Letter Books
472:Poesías completas
151:Leopoldo Marechal
90:Jorge Luis Borges
47:Jorge Luis Borges
16:(Redirected from
804:
734:
720:
713:
707:
706:
704:
702:
686:
648:Garth, Todd S.:
512:978-98797654-0-1
279:, leader of the
277:Leopoldo Lugones
109:Leopoldo Lugones
82:Papeles antiguos
61:Macedonio (like
21:
812:
811:
807:
806:
805:
803:
802:
801:
747:
746:
741:Wayback Machine
732:
729:
724:
723:
714:
710:
700:
698:
687:
683:
678:
601:Camblong, Ana:
579:
577:Further reading
553:
520:
491:Textos selectos
419:Obras completas
366:(1967); (1995)
332:
291:"Florida" group
186:
113:José Ingenieros
59:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
810:
800:
799:
794:
789:
784:
779:
774:
769:
764:
759:
745:
744:
728:
727:External links
725:
722:
721:
708:
680:
679:
677:
674:
673:
672:
665:
646:
636:
617:
610:
599:
582:Abós, Álvaro:
578:
575:
574:
573:
560:
552:
551:Correspondence
549:
548:
547:
535:
532:978-9995878801
519:
516:
515:
514:
501:
488:
482:
469:
463:
462:
461:
455:
442:
416:
403:
397:
391:
361:
351:
345:
339:
331:
328:
253:principles of
185:
182:
58:
55:
26:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
809:
798:
795:
793:
790:
788:
785:
783:
780:
778:
775:
773:
770:
768:
765:
763:
760:
758:
755:
754:
752:
742:
738:
731:
730:
718:
712:
696:
692:
685:
681:
670:
666:
663:
659:
655:
651:
647:
645:
641:
637:
634:
633:3-261-01777-5
630:
626:
622:
618:
615:
611:
608:
604:
600:
597:
596:950-644-020-4
593:
589:
585:
581:
580:
572:
571:950-05-1258-0
568:
564:
561:
558:
555:
554:
546:
542:
540:
536:
533:
529:
525:
522:
521:
513:
509:
505:
502:
500:
499:950-05-1181-9
496:
492:
489:
486:
483:
481:
480:84-7522-265-X
477:
473:
470:
467:
464:
459:
456:
454:
453:950-05-0584-3
450:
446:
443:
441:
440:84-8307-127-4
437:
433:
430:
429:
428:
427:950-05-0584-3
424:
420:
417:
415:
414:84-7223-542-4
411:
407:
404:
401:
398:
395:
392:
389:
388:84-660-0089-5
385:
381:
380:84-660-0090-9
377:
373:
372:84-376-1379-5
369:
365:
362:
359:
355:
352:
349:
346:
343:
340:
337:
334:
333:
327:
324:
320:
319:
318:Martín Fierro
314:
308:
306:
302:
298:
297:
292:
288:
287:
282:
278:
274:
273:
267:
264:
260:
256:
255:Élisée Reclus
252:
248:
244:
238:
236:
232:
228:
224:
220:
216:
212:
208:
204:
198:
194:
192:
181:
178:
176:
172:
168:
167:
162:
157:
156:
152:
148:
144:
139:
137:
134:time a young
131:
129:
125:
124:Martín Fierro
120:
118:
117:Juan B. Justo
114:
110:
106:
102:
97:
95:
91:
87:
83:
79:
74:
72:
68:
64:
54:
52:
48:
44:
40:
32:
19:
733:(in Spanish)
716:
711:
699:. Retrieved
694:
684:
668:
653:
649:
639:
624:
620:
613:
606:
602:
587:
583:
562:
556:
537:
523:
503:
490:
484:
471:
465:
457:
444:
431:
421:(1974-1995)
418:
405:
399:
393:
363:
357:
353:
347:
341:
335:
316:
312:
309:
304:
300:
294:
284:
280:
270:
268:
239:
223:Schopenhauer
218:
210:
207:Buenos Aires
199:
195:
187:
179:
174:
170:
164:
160:
158:
154:
142:
140:
132:
123:
121:
104:
98:
81:
77:
75:
60:
38:
37:
762:1952 deaths
757:1874 births
717:Dreamtigers
557:Epistolario
485:Todo y nada
323:Donald Shaw
307:, in 1926.
261:, near the
105:La Montaña,
88:(father of
78:El Progreso
751:Categories
281:modernista
603:Macedonio
374:; (1982)
313:ultraísmo
296:tertulias
286:ultraísta
251:anarchist
215:Emma Zunz
126:(not the
43:Argentine
18:Macedonio
701:July 30,
382: ;
356:(1944);
263:Bolivian
191:Socratic
136:ultraist
51:Creía yo
739:at the
506:(1999)
493:(1999)
474:(1991)
445:Teorías
408:(1973)
247:utopian
227:Bergson
63:Uruguay
660:
631:
594:
569:
530:
510:
497:
487:(1995)
478:
468:(1987)
451:
438:
425:
412:
390:(pbk.)
386:
378:
370:
360:(1989)
348:Poemas
344:(1941)
338:(1928)
138:poet.
676:Notes
330:Works
301:Museo
259:Chaco
703:2015
658:ISBN
629:ISBN
592:ISBN
567:ISBN
528:ISBN
508:ISBN
495:ISBN
476:ISBN
449:ISBN
436:ISBN
423:ISBN
410:ISBN
384:ISBN
376:ISBN
368:ISBN
225:and
149:and
111:and
57:Life
65:'s
753::
693:.
652:.
623:.
605:.
586:.
237:.
177:.
96:.
705:.
664:.
635:.
598:.
534:.
201:"
20:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.