Federico Gamboa Iglesias was a writer and diplomat from Mexico. He has been considered as one of the top representatives of Naturalism in México. Gamboa wrote novels, theater pieces, articles for newspapers and magazines and an autobiography when he was 28 years old. For many years took notes of his travels, experiences and thought, which he later published as five diaries. Posthumously another two more volumes of his diaries were published.
Life as a Mexican diplomat
Federico Gamboa was studying to become a Notary in the National School of Law. However, both of his parents died and he was forced to drop out and start working in 1884. He began as an assistant in a Civil Court and also began on his journalist career. In El Diario del Hogar newspaper he had a regular article called Desde mi mesa, which he signed as «La Corcadiere». Even though he was doing well for himself, he was not satisfied and joined public service. After passing all the tests, he joined the Mexican Foreign Affairs Service as second secretary on 9 October 1888. Gamboa was 24 years old when he was sent to Guatemala; afterwards he worked for the Mexican Embassy in Argentina. From 12 August to 24 September 1913 he was the Secretary of Foreign Affairs but he ended his diplomatic career after only forty four days to run for President, along with general Eugenio Rascón as vicepresident, for the National Catholic Party on 26 October 1913. He lost to Victoriano Huerta and Aureliano Blanquet.
Porfiriato
Federico Gamboa is well known as one of the most representative Mexican novelist of Porfirio Díaz regime; José Emilio Pacheco pointed out that Gamboa was «a geographic anomaly that found its place in the Porfirian society». Gamboa was, primarily, a man that searched for a good life from that time as the end of his life. For the writer and diplomat, being part of Porfirio Díaz government was more than a chance event: it was for him an inevitable destiny. However, reality of the Mexican Revolution changed his destiny. Porfirio Díaz left office in May 1911 and Gamboa received him in Europe and was able to keep his diplomatic post as ambassador in the Netherlands. During Victoriano Huerta presidency was invited to lead the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs; he led the Secretariat for forty four days and then left to run for president, but lost against Huerta. His return to México marked then Gamboa's end of his good life as public servant. Furthermore, during Venustiano Carranza presidency, Gamboa had to leave Mexico along with his wife María Sagaseta and his only child, going first to the United States and then to La Habana, Cuba, from 1914 to 1919.
Works
Novels
His novels are:
Del natural. Esbozos contemporáneos.
Apariencias
Unauthorized version of Apariencias in El Oeste in Mercedes, Argentina
Suprema Ley
Unauthorized version of Suprema Ley in a Caracas, Venezuela newspaper.
Metamorfosis
Santa
Reconquista
La llaga
El evangelista: novel about Mexican customs
Autobiography and memoirs
Impresiones y recuerdos
Mi Diario. Primera Serie I: 1892–1896,
Mi Diario I Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros Introducción de José Emilio Pacheco
Mi Diario, Primera Serie II: 1897–1900,
Mi Diario, Primera Serie III: 1901–1904,
Mi Diario, Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros, Segunda Serie I: 1905–1908,
Mi Diario IV Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros
Mi Diario, Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros, Segunda Serie II: 1909–1911
Mi Diario VI Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros Posthumous.
MI Diario VII Mucho de mi vida y algo de la de otros Posthumous.
Reporter, writer and chronicler for El Diario del Hogar. Finally, has his own space in 1886:Celajes de la ópera sign with the pseudonym «La Cocardière». A short while later, the column is called Desde mi mesa.
writer for El Lunes. Starts to sign the articles under his name.
Federico Gamboa and Ángel de Campo published in El Mundo the article Siluetas que pasan, that they wrote under the pseudonyms of Bouvard or Pécuchet.
Interim director, writer, in charge of translating into Spanish articles originally in English, French and Italian; in charge of the bibliographic section La Reforma Social magazine, in La Habana, Cuba.
wrote an article on weekly basis for El Universal.
Essays
La novela mexicana. This was a conference presented in the General Bookstore of Francisco Gamoneda on 3 January 1914. Printed the same year in México by México Eusebio Gómez de la Puente.
La confesión de un palacio. Essay about Mexican national history.
Un baile en Palacio, in collaboration with Gustavo Baz
Motion pictures based on his novels
Suprema Ley : made into a movie in 1936 and opened on 19 March 1937 in the Rex Cinema. Directed by Rafael E. Portas, it starred Andrés Soler and Gloria Morel.
Santa has been made into a movie four times in Mexico: in 1918, silent version directed by Luis G. Peredo with Elena Sánchez Valenzuela; in 1932, directed by Antonio Moreno, with a song from Agustín Lara and starring Lupita Tovar -this movie has been named within the best 100 films ever made in Mexico. In 1943, another version, directed by Norman Foster and starring Esther Fernandez, opened on June 10 in cinema Palacio and its showings lasted four weeks. Finally, in 1969 there Emilio Gómez Muriel directed the latest version.