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・ José Martínez (pitcher)
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José Martínez Ruiz
・ José Marzan, Jr.
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・ José María Aguirre Gonzalo
・ José María Aguirre T9
・ José María Albareda
・ José María Albiñana
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・ José María Algué
・ José María Alonso
・ José María Alvarado
・ José María Alvira
・ José María Alviso


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José Martínez Ruiz : ウィキペディア英語版
José Martínez Ruiz

José Augusto Trinidad Martínez Ruiz, better known by his pseudonym Azorín ((:aθoˈɾin); June 8, 1873, Monòver – March 2, 1967, Madrid), was a Spanish novelist, essayist and literary critic. A political radical in the 1890s, he moved steadily to the right. In literature he attempted to define the eternal qualities of Spanish life. His essays and criticism are written in a simple, compact style. Particularly notable are his impressionistic descriptions of Castilian towns and landscape.
==Early life and education==
José ("Pepe") Martínez Ruiz was born in Monovar, a village in the province of Alicante on 8 June 1873. Known as Pepe, he was the oldest of nine children but a lonely child who loved reading. His father, a middle-class lawyer, was an active conservative politician and later became a representative and mayor, and a follower of Romero Robledo). His mother, a landowner, was born in nearby Petrer.
From the age of eight, until he was 16, he attended a boarding school run by the Escolapius Fathers (Piarists) in his father's home town of Yecla in the province of Murcia, a time he recalled as opposed to “truth, rebelliousness, and freedom” in ''Memorias inmemoriales'', but also nostalgically in ''Las confesiones de un pequeño filósofo''.
From 1888 to 1896 he studied law at the University of Valencia, but did not complete his studies. Instead, he began to write, publishing a monograph on literary criticism in 1893. Here he began to write for local newspapers, contributing articles to the radical journal ''El pueblo'', edited by Blasco Ibáñez. He became interested in the ideas of Karl Krause, who argued that man could be reformed through education, and that openness to other nation's cultures could overcome national conservatism (see Spanish Krausism (Spanish )).
In 1895, Ruiz published ''Anarquistas literarios'' and ''Notas sociales'', in which he presented the main anarchist theories of the time. During this time he was a political radical. Ruiz became an admirer of the liberal Prime Minister Antonio Maura, who fought the culture of "caciques" (local political bosses), and who had become the figurehead of a youth movement, the Mauristas, who wanted him as a new head of state of Spain at a time of substantial resentment of King Alfonso XIII.

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