Joaquín Casalduero Martí (23 April 1903, Barcelona - 22 February 1990, Madrid) was a Spanish professor and literary critic. He won a 1944 Guggenheim Fellowship.[1] He was a member of the Generation of '27 with Pedro Salinas and Jorge Guillén. He taught in exile in the United States and a variety of countries across Europe.
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Joaquín Casalduero | |
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Born | 23 April 1903 ![]() Barcelona ![]() |
Died | 20 February 1990 ![]() Madrid ![]() |
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He graduated from the Universidad de Madrid, where he was a student of Ramón Menéndez Pidal. In Europe, he taught at the University of Strasburg, University of Marburg, University of Cambridge and Oxford University. In the United States, he taught at Smith College, Middlebury College, the University of Wisconsin, New York University, and University of California, San Diego.[2]
He edited a collected works of Benito Pérez Gadós.[3][4]
A street in Los Angeles was named for him.[5]
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