Josefina Niggli: daughter of the Mexican revolution: born in Mexico to American parents in 1910, Josefina Niggli portrayed Mexican life from an insider's point of view, writing well-received plays and novels in English.

AuthorMartinez, Elizabeth Coonrod
PositionBiography

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Just as the current boom of Latino music in the United States has its roots in dance rhythms that gained popularity in the 1920s, Latino literature is hardly a recent arrival. An early Mexican American writer with an unusual name blossomed in the US literary world during the era that Carmen Miranda was performing her fusion of Argentine, Brazilian, Mexican, and Caribbean dances, the trio Los Panchos came on the scene with songs of Mexican romance and nostalgia, and Hollywood featured (often stereotypically) passionate "Latin" characters. With internationally recognized plays in the late 1930s and bestselling novels a decade later, Josefina Niggli introduced Mexican thought and culture to US readers.

The trajectory of Niggli's life reflects both Mexican and US history during the first half of the twentieth century. Born in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, the same year as the inception of the Mexican Revolution--1910--she grew up in the countryside, her favorite pet a burro. As a child, she was occasionally summoned urgently into the house as shots were heard in the distance. As the years of battle dragged on, in 1925 Niggli and her mother joined other refugees who set up new lives across the border.

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Josefina had celebrated her quinceanera at the family ranch, and as is typical, prominent members of society were invited to the gala affair. In her case, the governor of Nuevo Leon attended and asked what she would like for a present. The fifteen-year-old quickly responded, "All of Monterrey." Years later, she would recount this anecdote to illustrate her great fondness for her birthplace, that sense of patria--both homeland and region--often professed in Mexican songs and poetry. The story also demonstrates the ardent desire that infused her creative works, to carry Monterrey with her, always. As a writer, she strove to reveal the complexities and beauty of the people of northern Mexico to the English-speaking world.

While Diego Rivera was creating his murals in the Mexican capital and being invited to major US cities, Niggli finished high school, published poetry, and completed a bachelor's degree at Incarnate Word College in San Antonio, Texas. As it was for others in northern Mexico, this city was a logical choice, an environment that had always been half-Mexican, half-Anglo. San Antonio had maintained a steady but small population during the previous century, then grew quickly to 160,000 by 1920, with the influx of Mexicans fleeing a civil war that killed more than a million people. For the next two decades, Josefina and her mother would go back and forth between San Antonio and the family ranch near Monterrey, where her father continued to work.

Some of Niggli's Mexican contemporaries have names currently more recognizable. Dolores del Rio, Anita Brenner, and Frida Kahlo were also born during the first decade of the twentieth century and reached their heyday in the same period as Niggli. Kahlo, who had begun painting self-portraits in 1926, declared herself a child of the Mexican Revolution (changing her year of birth from 1907 to 1910), but Niggli more appropriately deserves that designation.

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During the 1930s, Kahlo's unique paintings took on a bolder tone, and Niggli began creating her Mexican folk plays. Del Rio, born in the state of Durango, was from the north like Niggli; her film career was launched in Los Angeles in the late 1920s, and in ensuing decades she produced films in both countries. Brenner published journalistic works about the success of the Mexican Revolution, garnering attention in New York City. Born in Aguascalientes, Brenner also left her home for Texas when revolutionary fighting heated up; like Niggli, she always considered herself Mexican. Brenner and Kahlo died in Mexico, but Del Rio and Niggli had been living in the United States at the time of their decease and can be categorized as both Mexican and US Latinas.

Although she wrote in English, because of her themes and her birthplace Niggli belongs to the Mexican literary generation of Mariano Azuela, Martin Luis Guzman, and Nellie Campobello. The great intellectual...

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