Félix Tanco

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Tanco and the second or maternal family name is Bosmeniel.
Félix Tanco y Bosmeniel
Born Félix Manuel de Jesús Tanco y Bosmeniel
(1797-01-28)January 28, 1797
Bogota, Colombia
Died 1871 (aged 7374)
New York
Nationality Cuba
Notable works Petrona y Rosalía

Félix Tanco y Bosmeniel (Jan 28, 1797–1871, was a writer, poet, and novelist, better known for the first fictional story about slavery in the Americas: Petrona y Rosalía.

Born Félix Manuel de Jesús Tanco y Bosmeniel, in Bogotá, Colombia, he arrived in Cuba at a very young age.[1][2][3]

He was considered the most radical writer of the epoch speaking against the injustices committed by the colonial government. He wrote at length against slavery and the despotic treatment that many blacks suffered under its authoritarian rule.[4]

In the narrative of his masterpiece Petrona y Rosalía, he spoke about the cruelty inflicted onto the slaves by the ruling master class that was backed by the colonial government. He spoke against the white elitism that predominated in society, which was always protected by a group with special interests in the promulgation and the expansion of the slave trade.[2][5]

In 1834, while speaking up against the social inequities, Tanco was charged in the judicial court by Governor Miguel Tacón for writing an article about slavery. The article had been published in the literary magazine Aurora de Matanzas that same year. In the article, Tanco respectfully urged the Governor to eradicate, among other things, gambling, bribes, and the slave trade. The governor thought that the article was an insult to his authoritative rank, so he charged him with insubordination against the government.[2][6][7]

Bibliography

Literary criticism of Félix Tanco's publications

References

  1. Rodriguez-Arenas, Flor María (2006). Bibliografía de La Literatura Colombiana del Siglo XIX- Tomo II(M-Z). Stockcero, Inc. p. 512. ISBN 978-987-1136-47-6.
  2. 1 2 3 Gomariz, José (2005). Colonialismo e independencia cultural: la narración del artista e intelectual hispanoamericano del siglo XIX. Verbum Editorial. p. 169. ISBN 978-84-7962-327-2.
  3. Fornaris, Jose; Luaces, Joaquín Lorenzo (1861). José Socorro de León, ed. Cuba poética: Colección escogida de las composiciones en verso de los poetas cubanos desde Zequeira hasta nuestros días. Impr. de la viuda de Barcina y comp. pp. 62, 235.
  4. Ghorbal, Karim (2012) "Un radical discret: l'esclavage dans la pensée singulière de Félix Tanco Bosmeniel". Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez. Nouvelle série 42.1: 227-249.
  5. Branche, Jerome (2006). Colonialism and race in Luso-Hispanic literature. University of Missouri Press. p. 127.
  6. Morales y Morales, Vidal (1901). Iniciadores y primeros mártires de la revolución cubana. Capítulo VIII. p. 680.
  7. Domingo del Monte. (Aug 3, 1834) Carta de Domingo del Monte a Tomás Gener. Matanzas.
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