Agustina González López

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Agustina González López
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BornApril 4, 1891
Granada
Died1936
Viznar
NationalitySpanish
CitizenshipSpain
Occupation
  • Writer
  • Artist
MovementAbstract art, Feminism

Agustina González López, also known as "La Zapatera" (* April 4, 1891 in Granada; † 1936 in Víznar, Granada province) was a Spanish writer and artist who belonged to the so-called Generation of '27 [1]. She contested the Spanish parliamentary elections in 1933 with her own party and was executed by Nationalist faction|Nationalist forces in 1936 at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War [2]. Today she is considered a pioneer of Andalusian feminism [3] [4] and an avant-gardist, both politically and artistically [5].

Introduction

During her lifetime, Agustina González López was known as an eccentric: Her nickname was "la Zapatera" (English: the Shoemaker) [6] because her family owned a shoe store in Granada. She was a friend of Federico García Lorca [7], and contemporaries such as the writer Francisco Ayala (novelist)| Francisco Ayala described her as a "flamboyant figure, probably a madwoman":

"La Zapatera," Ayala wrote in his Relatos Granadinos, "wandered around a lot, entering cafés and restaurants, alone! and wrote absurd things, which she had printed and then offered for sale in the window of her shoe store."[8]

After her execution in 1936, rumors circulated that she had been killed because she was "a whore" or "a lesbian". [9] Her body was never identified [10] and she was forgotten. She was rediscovered only in 2010, as part of a research project at the University of Granada not originally dedicated to her. [11] Finally, in 2019, a biography of her was published in Spain, in which she is recognized as a feminist writer, artist, and politician.[12]

Life

Agustina González López was born in Granada on April 4, 1891. Her family had a shoe store at Calle Mesones No. 6. From the age of 7 to 9, she attended the Real Colegio in Granada as a boarding student, and she took an early interest in astronomy and medicine. [13] Her father died when she was 13, and her two older brothers took over her education. To escape their control, she began disguising herself as a young man and going out alone at night[14]. She was discovered, doctors diagnosed hysteria and prescribed strict bed rest. Facing punishment, Agustina González López claimed to suffer from "locura social" (social insanity) [15].

Agustina González López was financially independent[16]. She traveled alone and trained as a painter and engraver[17].

In 1916, at the age of 25, she published her first essay, Idearium Futurismo[18], and it was at this time that she met Federico García Lorca[19], who was inspired by her, not only for his play The Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife|La Zapatera Prodigiosa[20], but also for the character of Amelia in his play The House of Bernarda Alba[21]. "Amelia" was a name with which Agustina González López signed many of her drawings and watercolors[22].

She had contacts with Spanish suffragettes[23] as early as the 1920s. When the Spanish feminist Elisa Soriano Fisher (1891-1964) asked her for her assessment of the situation regarding women's rights in Granada, she described it in a letter in January 1920 thus:

I can only give you my own very humble and very frank opinion. The women in Grenada are backward and traditionalist, so it is useless to preach to them, and any modern and progressive movement scares them, I think they are carried away by the modern currents, but just carried away. I am disillusioned and it seems to me that I can make little difference here, I just lead by example, but they don't take it. My opinion on the two feminist congresses in Madrid: I think it's very good that both the Suffragettes Congress and the Congress organized by the Spanish feminists in honor of Concepción Arenal are taking place."[24]

In 1927 and 1928 she published two more essays, Justificación, a kind of autobiography, and Las Leyes Secretas (The Secret Laws), in which she expounded her philosophy of life [25].

In 1933, she founded a political party called Entero Humanista, with which she contested the Spanish parliamentary elections and received 15 votes. The party program called for, among other things, a world without borders, a common currency, education for all, equal rights for nobility and proletariat, and social acceptance for marriages of same-sex partners [26].

In 1936, shortly after the start of the Spanish Civil War, Agustina González López was imprisoned in Granada and shot along with two other women in the nearby town of Viznar. Her exact date of death is not known, and the murderers were never identified. The Francoist Juan Luis Trescastro later boasted of having killed both her and Garcia Lorca, "him because he was a faggot and her because she was a whore." [27].

Works

In 2019, three essays by Agustina González López were published as a book in Spain. During her lifetime she had her writings printed herself and sold them in her shoe store. Reviews of her first writing, Idearium Futurismo, appeared in the Spanish newspapers ABC [28] and La Correspondencia de España in 1917 [29].

Idearium Futurismo (1916)

In this essay, Agustina González López introduces a new kind of writing that she invented and calls "Futurismo." Her "Futurismo" abandons 7 letters of the Castilian alphabet (c, h, qu, v, x, y, z) and simplifies orthographic rules [30]. To demonstrate the practicality of the new futuristic script, the essay itself is also futuristic, i.e., written in simplified Spanish:

El sistema futurista de eskribir resuelve las difikultades ortográfikas por lo mismo que simplifika la Ortografía" (English: "The futurist writing system solves spelling difficulties by simplifying spelling").

The goal is to popularize writing, enabling even illiterate people to communicate their thoughts [31] [32]. Today, the writing designed by Agustina González López is considered an anticipation of those spellings that are common in (Spanish) short messages via SMS or Whatsapp [33].

Justificación (1927)

The essay Justificación is a kind of autobiography in which Agustina González López explains herself and responds to criticism of her behavior, which contemporaries considered scandalous [34]. She was subjected to numerous hostilities in the conservative Granada of her time, not only because she went out alone and wore men's clothes, but also because she publicly stood up for her freedom and for the emancipation of women [35]. She counters the accusation of being a madwoman thus:

Social insanity consists in the fact that the person called insane is sane and the society in which he lives does not understand him and therefore misjudges him. ... This madness manifests itself in the error of others. And I have been suffering from this madness for 23 years." [36]

In her essay, she describes herself as a feminist and claims to have paved the way for younger women:

Little by little they gave me permission to go out on my own and wear whatever I wanted. Now young ladies study, paint, write, work, go out alone and it's not frowned upon. I, who have always stepped out of line - you will not deny me that in many of these cases I have made the Christ." [37]

Another subject of the essay is the question of why there are feminine men ("hombres afeminados") and masculine women ("mujeres masculinizadas") [38].

Las Leyes Secretas (1928)

Agustina González López came into early contact with spiritual and theosophical movements that were fashionable at the beginning of the 20th century. In the essay Las Leyes Secretas (The Secret Laws), she tells how, as a hypnotist, she succeeded in capturing apparitions in watercolors and photogravure|photogravures [39]. According to her biographer Enriqueta Barranco Castillo, this makes her a pioneer of abstract art, similar to Georgiana Houghton (1814-1884) and Hilma af Klint (1862-1944) [40]

References

  1. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  2. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta (2019). Agustina Gónzález López (1891-1936): Espiritista, Teósofa, Escritora y Política. Editorial Universidad de Granada. ISBN 978-8433865076.
  3. Friera, Silvina (February 5, 2020). "Agustina González López y un rescate imprescindible". Pagina12.
  4. Fagoaga, Concha (1985). La Voz Y El Voto De Las Mujeres.l sufragismo en España 1877-1931. Icaria editorial. ISBN 978-8474261073.
  5. Pérez, Juan (September 7, 2019). "Agustina González López, La Zapatera, fusilada por romper moldes". El Independiente. (Spanish): "Agustina González López: Escritora, política, progresista, feminista… Mujer inclasificable, adelantada a su tiempo,...Fue una intelectual global"
  6. González López (La Zapatara), Agustina. "Who was who - Universo Lorca". Universo Lorca. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  7. González López (La Zapatara), Agustina. "Who was who - Universo Lorca". Universo Lorca. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  8. Ayala, Francisco (1990). Relatos Granadinos. Spain: Ayuntamiento de Granada. ISBN 84-87713-01-7. Retrieved 10 October 2021. (Spanish): "La Zapatera era una figura extravagante, probablemente una chiflada, callejeaba mucho, entraba -¡y sola!- en los cafés y restaurantes y escribía cosas absurdas que hacía imprimir y ponía luego a la venta en el escaparate de su zapatería."
  9. Gallastegui, Inés. "Doble velo de silencio". Ideal. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  10. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta. "Agustina González López". Todos los Nombres. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  11. Cárdenas, Andrés. ""Ai ke ablar de la kuestion"". Ideal. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  12. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta (2019). Agustina González López (1891-1936) Espiritista, Teósofa, escritora y política. Spain: Universidad de Granada, Editorial Universidad de Granada. ISBN 9788433865076. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  13. Cárdenas, Andrés. ""Ai ke ablar de la kuestion"". Ideal. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  14. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  15. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta. "Agustina González López". Todos los Nombres. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  16. Gallastegui, Inés. "Doble velo de silencio". Ideal. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  17. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta. "Agustina González López". Todos los Nombres. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  18. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  19. González López (La Zapatara), Agustina. "Who was who - Universo Lorca". Universo Lorca. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  20. Friera, Silvina (February 5, 2020). "Agustina González López y un rescate imprescindible". Pagina12.
  21. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta. "Aspectos teosóficos del teatro de Agustina González". studylib.es. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  22. González López (La Zapatara), Agustina. "Who was who - Universo Lorca". Universo Lorca. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  23. Fagoaga, Concha (1985). La Voz Y El Voto De Las Mujeres.l sufragismo en España 1877-1931. Icaria editorial. ISBN 978-8474261073.
  24. Fagoaga, Concha (1985). La Voz Y El Voto De Las Mujeres.l sufragismo en España 1877-1931. Icaria editorial. ISBN 978-8474261073. (Spanish):...puedo darle a usted mi opinión particular muy modesta y muy franca. ... Las mujeres granadinas son retrógradas y tradicionalistas, aferradas a las costumbres hasta cierto punto árabes, así que calcule usted es predicarles inútil y todo movimiento moderno y progresista les aterra, yo creo que serán arrastradas por las corrientes modernas pero arrastradas. Yo estoy desengañada y me parece que trabajaré poco aquí en la localidad, únicamente trabajo con el ejemplo pero no lo toman. Con respecto a mi opinión sobre los dos congresos feministas de Madrid: que me parece muy bien que se celebre tanto el Sufragista como el que organizan las feministas españolas en honor de Concepción Arenal.
  25. Barranco Castillo, Enriqueta. "Agustina González López". Todos los Nombres. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  26. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  27. Gibson, Ian (1 May 1983). The Assassination of Federico Garcia Lorca. Penguin Books. p. 288. ISBN 978-0140064735. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  28. "Archivo ABC. 19 September 1917". abc.es. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  29. "La Correspondencia de España, nº 21.741. 22.August 1917". /hemerotecadigital.bne.es. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  30. Arroyo, Javier. ""Kedan suprimidas por konpleto siete konsonantes del kastellano"". elpais.com. El País. 18 December 2019. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  31. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  32. Arroyo, Javier. ""Kedan suprimidas por konpleto siete konsonantes del kastellano"". elpais.com. El País. 18 December 2019. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  33. Cárdenas, Andrés. ""Ai ke ablar de la kuestion"". Ideal. Confederación General del Trabajo de Andaluciá. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  34. Cornejo, Josefina. "Con pantalones (5). Agustina González López". cvc.cervantes.es. Instituto Cervantes. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  35. Pérez, Juan (September 7, 2019). "Agustina González López, La Zapatera, fusilada por romper moldes". El Independiente.
  36. "Futuristas Del Pasado". herstoricas.com. Herstóricas. Retrieved 10 October 2021. (Quote in Spanish):La locura social, consiste, en que el señalado como loco, está cuerdo, y que la sociedad en que vive no lo comprende y por lo mismo, lo juzga mal ...Esta locura se manifiesta en el error de los otros. Y esta locura la vengo yo padeciendo veintitrés años.
  37. "Futuristas Del Pasado". herstoricas.com. Herstóricas. Retrieved 10 October 2021. (Quote in Spanish): Poco a poco me fueron dando permiso unos y otros para salir sola, llevar puesto lo que quisiera […] Ahora las señoritas estudian, pintan, escriben, trabajan, salen solas y no está mal visto; yo que siempre he roto filas, no me negareis, que en muchas de estas causas he hecho el Cristo.
  38. Gallego, Mar (September 27, 2018). "Agustina, la escritora futurista". Pikara Magazine.
  39. Pérez, Juan (September 7, 2019). "Agustina González López, La Zapatera, fusilada por romper moldes". El Independiente.
  40. Campos, Débora. "Entrevista con su biógrafa "Ai ke ablar de la kuestion", la historia de la española que en 1916 anticipó el lenguaje del chat". clarin.com. Clarín. Argentina. Retrieved 10 October 2021.

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