Severo Sarduy (born February 25, 1937, Camagüey, Cuba—died June 8, 1993, Paris, France) was a novelist, poet, critic, and essayist, one of the most daring and brilliant writers of the 20th century.
Born in a working-class family of Spanish, African, and Chinese heritage, Sarduy was the top student in his high school. He went to Havana in the mid-1950s to study medicine. Though he did not finish his studies, he retained a lifelong interest in science. While living in the capital he pursued his vocation for poetry and painting and came into contact with older writers such as José Rodríguez Feo and José Lezama Lima. He published his first poems in the journal Ciclón, directed by the former.
With the advent of the revolution in 1959, Sarduy became one of a group of young writers given the task of renewing Cuban literature. Sent to Paris by the government in 1960 to study art at the École du Louvre, Sarduy decided not to return to Cuba when his scholarship ran out a year later. Disaffected with Castro’s regime and fearful of its persecution of homosexuals and the censorship imposed on writers, Sarduy never went home. In Paris he became close to the group of critics and theoreticians who published the journal Tel Quel, which promoted structuralism and experimental writing. He was also involved with Mundo Nuevo, a Spanish-language journal directed by Uruguayan critic Emir Rodríguez Monegal. Through these journals and his considerable production, Sarduy acquired a good deal of fame, even though he was systematically ignored by the Cuban cultural bureaucracy, who never mentioned him in their publications and left him out of all reference works.
Sarduy’s first novel, Gestos (1963; “Gestures”), is about a young woman involved in terrorist activities against the Batista regime in the Cuba of the 1950s. It was well received. His most important book, however, was the highly experimental novel De donde son los cantantes (1967; From Cuba with a Song). The book includes three narratives that encompass the entire history of Cuba and aspire to give a global view of its culture. An even more experimental novel followed, Cobra (1972; Eng. trans. Cobra), where the setting is a transvestite theatre and some episodes occur in India and China. His novel Maitreya (1978; Eng. trans. Maitreya) opens in Tibet, but the characters, in search of a messiah, travel to Cuba and the United States, then end up in Iran. Colibrí (1982; “Hummingbird”) is a book about the South American jungle, and El Cristo de la rue Jacob (1987; Christ on the Rue Jacob) is a series of impressionistic sketches, some of them autobiographical. Sarduy’s posthumous Pájaros de la playa (1993; “Beach Fowl”) is about a sanatorium for sufferers of AIDS, the disease that killed the author. He is also known for his theories about the Baroque, which he expounded in his essay Barroco (1974; Eng. trans. Barroco).