Discover Minorca : Literature (Comics / News)

Minorca was certainly a literary center, as it was not far from its capital, Maó, that Maria Cardona-Sintes, future grandmother of Albert Camus, was born. Although the 1957 Nobel Prize winner is not known to have visited the land of his ancestors - whatever the novelist Mario Jaramillo may have imagined - the Trobades, a biennial philosophical event, has been held under her patronage since its first edition in spring 2017. The Balearic island also proved attractive to writers who enjoyed spending the summer season here, as in the case of Frenchman Eugène Dabit, who made the island his home as early as 1932, and Dutchman Cees Nooteboom in the 21st century. Both have written about their beloved and inspiring refuge! But Menorca is also proud of its native authors. Unfortunately, the lack of translations means that this heritage is no longer accessible to us, but it is nonetheless fertile.

See the top 10 associated with this file: Lecture

Roots..

From west to east, from Ciutadella, where witches secretly officiate, to Maó, where ghosts relentlessly haunt the Château de Saint-Philippe, Menorca is home to a whole corpus of legends, including the memory of its famous shipwrecks and the myth of its sunken cities. In 1990, Carlos Garrido Torres took an interest in this ancestral heritage and published Menorca Màgica, a work that became a bestseller, but which we are not yet able to discover in our own language. Long after the giant who first inhabited the island is said to have abandoned it, Menorca remained fertile ground for the imagination, even if reality eventually caught up with it. For example, French writer and playwright Pierre-Nicolas Brunet (1733-1771) candidly confessed to mixing narrative and fiction in Minorque conquise, which he published in 1756. This "poëme héroïque, en quatre chants" is a delightful read for anyone with a taste for the language of yesteryear, and can be downloaded free of charge from Gallica, the BNF website. It's worth mentioning that it tells of a memorable siege and a British admiral, John Byng. Joan Ramis i Ramis (1746-1819) wanted to be more precise. The titles of his many opuses - Resumen topográfico e histórico de Menorca, Alquerías de Menorca, Varones ilustres de Menorca, Antigüedades célticas de Menorca... - demonstrate his natural rigor and curiosity. That said, he sometimes abandoned the sciences to devote himself to poetry and theater, which was hardly surprising for a man who was both a lawyer and one of the founders, in 1778, of the Societat Maonesa de Cultura. A great capacity for adaptation that certainly served him well in his day-to-day life, as the upheavals that shook his native island during the 18th century brought him face to face with different languages and cultures - French, English, Catalan and Spanish..

This question of linguistics - and, more broadly, of identity - was also to agitate his friend Antoni Febrer i Cardona, 15 years his junior, who with him created the Societat Maonesa de Cultura and joined the Grup Il-lustrat Menorquí. Febrer - who was born under French rule, lived through the British occupation and saw the arrival of the Spanish - first studied law in Avignon, before devoting himself fully to literature, becoming a translator (from Latin into Catalan), author of a Principis de la lectura menorquina discovered after his death, and above all a grammarian. His studies on the Minorcan dialect - derived from the Catalan language, but with its own specific characteristics - are still highly prized, as is his impressive Minorcan-Spanish-French-Latin Dictionary. Just a century and a year later, on the neighboring island of Mallorca, in Manacor to be precise, Antoni Maria Alcover was born in 1862. He set about collecting Mallorcan vocabulary, and the following year inaugurated Spain's first philological journal. This project was to become the Catalan-Valencian-Balearic Dictionary, to which he actively contributed and edited until his death in 1932, when he was succeeded by Francesc de Borja Moll (1903-1991) from Menorca. The first volume of this colossal ten-volume work was published in 1926, the last only in 1962, the Franco dictatorship having in the meantime put a stop to such initiatives..

... to writing

Vicar and Latin teacher Antoni Moll Camps (1926-2023) was crowned "Patriarca de les lletres menorquines" with Serenor (1947), the first Catalan-language work to appear after the end of the civil war, one of the last battles of which was fought on the island. In 1966, he emigrated to Chile, left the church to marry four years later, and only resumed publishing in 1986 with Inventari de minyonia, written in prose. Pau Faner i Coll, born in Ciutadella in 1949, also served as a link between the two continents, as he is credited with introducing the typically Latin American literary movement, Magic Realism, into Catalan literature. His novels, for young and old, and his short stories, including those inspired by Menorca, which were his first published work in 1972, have won him prestigious awards (Premi Josep Pla de narrativa in 1983, Premi Nadal de novel in 1985...) and made him one of his island's most famous writers.

However, it was the authors born in the second half of the 20th century who confirmed the effervescence of Menorcan literature. Even if the absence of translations doesn't let us imagine it, they are indeed numerous, publishing and enlivening the island's cultural life. Josep Maria Quintana Petrus' involvement with various institutions was intense, and his eclectic work was recognized with numerous awards. Joan F. López Casasnovas (1952-2022) co-founded theInstitut Menorquí d'Estudis. A professor of languages and literature, he wrote numerous articles on linguistics under his own name, reserving his pseudonym Pere Xerxa for his poetic verses. Self-taught but the son of a poet, Pere Gomilla, born in Alaior in 1954, has a taste for the stage and performance: between 1977 and 1979, he took part in the artistic group Es Mussols, and since 2004 has organized the Illanvers festival. He has also published regularly since 1978(Regió afòtica) and contributed to magazines such as S'Ull de Sol and Menorca. Josefina Salord Ripoll also began her career in newspapers, before tackling more substantial works(Diccionari del teatre a les Illes Balears, Diccionari de la literatura catalana), all the while being very active in theAteneu de Maó and the Cercle Artístic de Ciutadella. We should also mention poet Ponç Pons, widely acclaimed for his multi-faceted work, and Bel Joan Casasnovas, who made a name for herself in 1991 at the Biennal Literària de poesia de Sant Joan, and their female counterparts, novelists Esperança Camps and Maite Salord Ripoll. Last but not least, the next generation of poets appears to be assured thanks to Lucia Palliser, who is particularly involved in organizing Menorca's slam festival, and Guillem Benejam, born in 1990, who has already won several prizes and is also very involved in a number of literary events.

Top 10: Lecture

Minorcan literature

With its endless beaches, Menorca is the ideal destination for long hours of reading. And it's just the thing for writers, who enjoy using the island as a backdrop for their novels. It's a great way to slip into the shoes of inspiring characters and experience thrilling adventures alongside them.

Albert Camus and his clandestine trip to Minorca

In 1958, a year after his Nobel Prize, Albert Camus left for Minorca, where he spent seven days investigating a crime, falling in love and talking philosophy. Mario Jaramillo, Editions Domens.

Minorca's Kropotkin

Forced to flee his island in 1939, the main character remains in touch with his family thanks to an abundant correspondence in which he describes his journey. Marie-Hélène Gouaux, éditions L'Harmattan.

Islas: flavours of the Balearic Islands

Hundreds of simple recipes typical of the Balearic Islands to make your trip even longer. Emma Warren, published by Hachette pratique.

Menorca des de l'arquitectura

No fewer than 164 pages of photographs of houses that also bear witness to changing lifestyles. Toni Vidal, published by Triangle Postals.

533: the book of days

His stays in Menorca between 2014 and 2016 inspired the famous Dutch writer to write this collection of thoughts and memories. Cees Nooteboom, published by Actes Sud.

Minorca campaign from the diary of Commander de Glandevez

In 1756, Louis XV commissioned Richelieu to seize Minorca, then under British rule. Raoul de Cisternes, published by Hachette BNF.

L'Île

Three short stories, first published in 1934, set on the island of Menorca and featuring its fishermen as protagonists. Eugène Dabit, published by Gallimard.

Morning burns

As civil war rumbles on, Maria is sent to live with her grandmother in the Balearics, where she meets a young man she falls in love with. Ana Maria Matute, Libretto Editions.

The prodigious story of the Mahonnais in Algeria

From 1830 to 1870, many of Maó's inhabitants left the region to settle in Algeria, discovering a little-known exodus. Guy Tudury, Editions Lacour-Ollé.

Green Sugar

Three women detained in the high-security prison of the Balearic Islands, three destinies to discover, far from the paradisiacal image of the archipelago. Émilie Loustaunau-Apons, éditions L'Harmattan.

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