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Efraín Huerta : ウィキペディア英語版
Efraín Huerta

Efraín Huerta (Silao, Guanajuato, June 18, 1914 – Mexico City, February 3, 1982)〔 〕〔 〕 was a Mexican poet and journalist. Born and raised in the state of Guanajuato, he moved to Mexico City initially to start a career in art. Unable to enter the Academy of San Carlos, he attended the Escuela Preparatoria Nacional, where he met writers such as Rafael Solana, Carmen Toscano and Octavio Paz. He has been writing poetry since he was young, but initially opted to attend law school; however, when he published his first book of poems, the left to pursue writing full time. As a poet, he published regularly from the 1930s to the 1980s, and as a journalist collaborated with over twenty newspapers and journals, under his own name and using pseudonyms. He was also active politically, a communist and Stalin supporter through his life with his social and political ideas finding their way into his writing. Poetically, he is part of the Taller generation of Mexican poets, although his development was a bit different from others in this group. Near the end of his career, his work had developed a colloquial style, including work focusing on Mexico City and creating a new form called a “poemínimo.”
==Life==
Efraín Huerta was born Efrén Huerta Roma in Silao, Guanajuato, Mexico, in 1914, during the Mexican Revolution which would have a profound impact on his life and Mexico in the 20th century.〔〔 〕〔 (【引用サイトリンク】work=Enciclopeida de la Literatura en México ) 〕 He was the seventh of eight children born to José Mercedes Huerta, a lawyer and judge and Sara Roma, with two of his siblings dying in childhood.〔
The family moved to Irapuato in 1917, where the parents separated, with Huerta moving with his mother and siblings to León, and later in 1925 to Querétaro. Huerta’s father remained in Irapuato where the poet visited him on occasion as a teenager.〔〔 Huerta began primary school late in León, and went on to middle school in Querétaro, attending the Colegio Civil del Estado and later the Academia de Bellas Artes.〔〔 〕〔 〕 In his youth he held various types of jobs including drawing advertising posters.〔 In his free time, he was a passionate soccer player,〔 and later in his life would become a fan of the Mexico City Atlante team, never missing a home game.〔
Huerta’s interest in drawing prompted him to move to Mexico City at age 16 and live with family members while he tried to get into the Academy of San Carlos, but was not accepted.〔 〕〔〔 Nonetheless, Huerta would remain in this city for the rest of his life, living in various neighborhoods in the center and west such as Tabacalera, El Periodista, historic center and Polanco.〔
Instead, Huerta entered the National Preparatory School in 1931, studying under Julio Torri and Agustín Loera y Chávez and forming friendships with Rafael Solana and Carmen Toscano. Huerta also met Octavio Paz at the institution, who was one year ahead of him.〔〔 Paz and Huerta formed a close relationship in their youth, sharing social, literary and political interests. However, in later life, these two would become distant as their political views diverged.〔
Huerta entered the law school of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in 1933, but stayed for only two years.〔 At this time, he changed his name to Efraín, a the suggestion of Rafael Solana, with the idea that it sounded better. For a short time he also used the Hebrew version Ephraím.〔〔 During his time in law school, Huerta had continued to write poetry, and when the book ''Absoluto amor'' (which he dedicated to Adela María Salinas) was published in 1935, he left to dedicate himself to writing.〔〔
In 1941, Huerta married his first wife, Mireya Bravo Munguía, who he had known for a decade prior, with Ocatvio Paz as best man. She appears in his poetry as “Andrea de Plata.〔〔 The couple had three children Andrea Huerta Bravo (1943), Eugenia Huerta Bravo (1945) and David Huerta Bravo (1949).〔 Much of his day-to-day life during this period revolved about the historic center of Mexico City, especially the area around the Monument to the Revolution and the main street called San Juan de Letrán (today Eje Central). Late nights he was a regular customer at Sidralí, a hot dog and cider establishment, a favorite among journalists, and every Sunday was spent at the Ciudad de los Deportes to watch a bullfight or a match involving the Atlante team. He was an involved father, especially with his two daughters, taking them to the movies, to the Zaplana bookstore, Super Leche (known for its hamburgers and bottles of milk) and El Moro for churros and hot chocolate, all along San Juan de Letran.〔 However, according to one of these daughters, he was not faithful to their mother.〔 Son David would grow up to also be a poet and critic, but in a style very different from his father’s.〔 〕〔
Huerta married for the second time in 1958 with poet and fellow radical Thelma Nava. With her he had two more daughters Thelma Huerta Nava (1959) and Raquel Huerta Nava (1963).〔 With these two he traveled to Morelia, Guanajuato and Querétaro, along with small towns, often looking for Mexican handcrafts. With this family, he lived in Polanco, where he wandering would take him to nearby cafes and restaurants.〔
The origin of Huerta’s nickname El Cocodrilismo “The Crocodilism” is in late 1949, during funding drive for a school in San Felipe Torresmochas, Guanajuato. Here Huerta told crocodile stories, saying that we all have a crocodile in us.〔 In 1973, Huerta was diagnosed with cancer of the larynx, and had the organ removed. Although he survived the cancer, it left him mostly voiceless, recuperating some of his ability to speak with the help of speech therapy.〔〔
Efraín Huerta died almost ten years later in Mexico City at the age of 67 due to kidney failure after battling a return of cancer. He is buried in Xochitepec.〔〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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