Los Contemporáneos (which means "The Contemporaries" in English) can refer to a Mexicanmodernist group, active in the late 1920s and early 1930s, as well as to the literary magazine which served as the group's mouthpiece and artistic vehicle from 1928 to 1931. In a way, they were opposed to stridentism.
Members of the group began writing for and collaborating in magazines and other literary venues. They also started their own publications, the first of which, México Moderno, was described as an "art and literature review" and ran from 1920 to 1923. La Falange (December 1922-February 1923), labeled a "review of Latin culture", and Ulises (May 1927–February 1928; see also Teatro Ulises), billed as a source of "curiosity and criticism", were two other short-lived, though influential, literary journals founded and directed by Contemporáneos.
In 1928, Torres Bodet inaugurated the group's longest-lived editorial endeavor, the magazine Contemporáneos. From June 1928 until December 1931 the magazine published, along with representative work by its founding members and allies, pieces by older, more established Mexican, Latin American, and Spanish writers, as well as translations of favored American and European authors. The rich and varied content of the publication was complemented by expensive details such as fine magazine paper and photographs and illustrations (made possible by continued government subventions).
In 1928, Jorge Cuesta would also publish, under the aegis of the Contemporáneos press, a poeticanthology titled Antología de la poesía mexicana moderna, which would give rise to heated polemics because of what were perceived, in certain literary and intellectual quarters, as glaring editorial omissions. Needless to say, much of the anthology's pages were taken up by the poetic output of Contemporáneos.
Los Contemporáneos: tradition and innovation
The group's central ideological position can be described as one of "contemporary [hence the name] cultural universalism": they were aware of the emergence of an unprecedented universality of cultural expression and innovation (brought about by capitalism's advance and accelerating technological progress), which they sought to not simply participate in, but, through their own particular vantage point as Mexican artists, contribute to as well. As individuals and as a group they would go on to expand the horizons of Mexican poetry. The Contemporáneos were, if you will, rather contemporary. Not to be confused with temporary - lasting for a short period of time.
The Contemporáneos produced work which was characterized by the extensive, sometimes essentializing, use of metaphor, and complex imagery, which served to express experimental disjointments in narrative time and space meant to convey or reinforce particular philosophical or scientific concepts or concerns. At times, the Contemporáneos were accused of literary effetism and elitism, especially when compared to groups more politically vocal and nationalist, such as the estridentistas, and of giving excessive preference to the airy and philosophical over the robust, the manly, and the mundane.
Bibliography
(Spanish) Abreu Gómez, Ermilo. Contemporáneos, Las revistas de México, Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1963.
(English) Oropesa, Salvador. The Contemporáneos Group: rewriting Mexico in the 1930s and 1940s, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2003.
(Spanish) Sheridan, Guillermo. Los Contemporáneos ayer, México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2003.
(Spanish) Madrigal Hernández, Érika. Tamayo y los Contemporáneos: El discurso de lo clásico y lo universal. Anales del Instituto de Investigationes Estéticas, México, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México-Instituto de Investigationes Estéticas, vol. XXX, núm. 92, primavera de 2008, pp. 155–189.
(Spanish) Hadatty Mora, Yanna. La ciudad paroxista. Prosa mexicana de vanguardia (1921–1932), México: UNAM, 2009.