Roberto Arlt

Argentine author
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Quick Facts
Born:
April 2, 1900, Buenos Aires, Arg.
Died:
July 26, 1942, Buenos Aires (aged 42)

Roberto Arlt (born April 2, 1900, Buenos Aires, Arg.—died July 26, 1942, Buenos Aires) was a novelist, short-story writer, dramatist, and journalist who pioneered the novel of the absurd in Argentinian literature.

A first-generation descendant of German immigrants, Arlt felt alienated from Argentine society. The world of his novels El juguete rabioso (1926; “The Rabid Toy”), Los siete locos (1929; “The Seven Madmen”), Los lanzallamas (1931; “The Flame Throwers”), and El amor brujo (1932; “False Love”) is grotesque and nightmarish and is filled with anguished, half-insane characters who are in revolt against society. His Aguafuertes porteñas (1950; “Etchings from the Port”) and Nuevas aguafuertes porteñas (1960), orginally published as articles in El Mundo, are picaresque sketches of the people of Buenos Aires that show great psychological perception and intense irony. Among Arlt’s plays, Trescientos millones (1932; “Three Hundred Million”) and Saverio el cruel (1936; “Saverio the Cruel,” not staged until 1956) stand out. Trescientos millones is rich in its use of experimental techniques, and Saverio is notable for its treatment of reality along Pirandellian lines. Arlt’s complete fictional works were published in 1963.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.